We developed a fully flexible docking method that uses a reduced lattice representation of protein molecules, adapted for modeling peptide-protein complexes. The CABS model (Carbon Alpha, Carbon Beta, Side Group) employed here, incorporates three pseudo-atoms per residue-C alpha. C beta and the center of the side group instead of full-atomic protein representation. Force field used by CABS was derived from statistical analysis of non-redundant database of protein structures. Application of our method included modeling of the complexes between various nuclear receptors (NRs) and peptide co-activators, for which three-dimensional structures are known. We tried to rebuild the native state of the complexes, starting from separated components. Accuracy of the best obtained models, calculated as coordinate root-mean-square deviation (cRMSD) between the target and the modeled structures, was under 1 angstrom, which is competitive with experimental methods, such as crystallography or NMR. Forthcoming modeling study should lead to better understanding of mechanisms of macromolecular assembly and will explain co-activators effects on receptors activity, especially on vitamin D receptor and other nuclear receptors. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.