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Phylogeny-independent detection of functional residues
Author(s) -
Florencio Pazos,
Antonio Rausell,
Alfonso Valencia
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
bioinformatics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.599
H-Index - 390
eISSN - 1367-4811
pISSN - 1367-4803
DOI - 10.1093/bioinformatics/btl104
Subject(s) - hierarchy , sequence (biology) , computer science , sequence alignment , similarity (geometry) , function (biology) , phylogenetic tree , phylogenetics , computational biology , artificial intelligence , pattern recognition (psychology) , biology , data mining , machine learning , genetics , peptide sequence , image (mathematics) , gene , economics , market economy
Current projects for the massive characterization of proteomes are generating protein sequences and structures with unknown function. The difficulty of experimentally determining functionally important sites calls for the development of computational methods. The first techniques, based on the search for fully conserved positions in multiple sequence alignments (MSAs), were followed by methods for locating family-dependent conserved positions. These rely on the functional classification implicit in the alignment for locating these positions related with functional specificity. The next obvious step, still scarcely explored, is to detect these positions using a functional classification different from the one implicit in the sequence relationships between the proteins. Here, we present two new methods for locating functional positions which can incorporate an arbitrary external functional classification which may or may not coincide with the one implicit in the MSA. The Xdet method is able to use a functional classification with an associated hierarchy or similarity between functions to locate positions related to that classification. The MCdet method uses multivariate statistical analysis to locate positions responsible for each one of the functions within a multifunctional family.

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