Systematic and Fully Automated Identification of Protein Sequence Patterns
- 1 August 2000
- journal article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Journal of Computational Biology
- Vol. 7 (3-4) , 585-600
- https://doi.org/10.1089/106652700750050952
Abstract
We present an efficient algorithm to systematically and automatically identify patterns in protein sequence families. The procedure is based on the Splash deterministic pattern discovery algorithm and on a framework to assess the statistical significance of patterns. We demonstrate its application to the fully automated discovery of patterns in 974 PROSITE families (the complete subset of PROSITE families which are defined by patterns and contain DR records). Splash generates patterns with better specificity and undiminished sensitivity, or vice versa, in 28% of the families; identical statistics were obtained in 48% of the families, worse statistics in 15%, and mixed behavior in the remaining 9%. In about 75% of the cases, Splash patterns identify sequence sites that overlap more than 50% with the corresponding PROSITE pattern. The procedure is sufficiently rapid to enable its use for daily curation of existing motif and profile databases. Third, our results show that the statistical significance of discovered patterns correlates well with their biological significance. The trypsin subfamily of serine proteases is used to illustrate this method's ability to exhaustively discover all motifs in a family that are statistically and biologically significant. Finally, we discuss applications of sequence patterns to multiple sequence alignment and the training of more sensitive score-based motif models, akin to the procedure used by PSI-BLAST. All results are available at httpl//www.research.ibm.com/spat/.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- SPLASH: structural pattern localization analysis by sequential histogramsBioinformatics, 2000
- Pfam 3.1: 1313 multiple alignments and profile HMMs match the majority of proteinsNucleic Acids Research, 1999
- PRINTS prepares for the new millenniumNucleic Acids Research, 1999
- Approaches to the Automatic Discovery of Patterns in BiosequencesJournal of Computational Biology, 1998
- Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programsNucleic Acids Research, 1997
- Protein sequence motifsCurrent Opinion in Structural Biology, 1996
- Amino acid substitution matrices from protein blocks.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1992
- Prosite: a dictionary of sites and patterns in proteinsNucleic Acids Research, 1991
- Automated assembly of protein blocks for database searchingNucleic Acids Research, 1991
- Profile analysis: detection of distantly related proteins.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1987