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. 2010 May 28;4 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):S3.
doi: 10.1186/1752-0509-4-S1-S3.

BindN+ for accurate prediction of DNA and RNA-binding residues from protein sequence features

Affiliations

BindN+ for accurate prediction of DNA and RNA-binding residues from protein sequence features

Liangjiang Wang et al. BMC Syst Biol. .

Abstract

Background: Understanding how biomolecules interact is a major task of systems biology. To model protein-nucleic acid interactions, it is important to identify the DNA or RNA-binding residues in proteins. Protein sequence features, including the biochemical property of amino acids and evolutionary information in terms of position-specific scoring matrix (PSSM), have been used for DNA or RNA-binding site prediction. However, PSSM is rather designed for PSI-BLAST searches, and it may not contain all the evolutionary information for modelling DNA or RNA-binding sites in protein sequences.

Results: In the present study, several new descriptors of evolutionary information have been developed and evaluated for sequence-based prediction of DNA and RNA-binding residues using support vector machines (SVMs). The new descriptors were shown to improve classifier performance. Interestingly, the best classifiers were obtained by combining the new descriptors and PSSM, suggesting that they captured different aspects of evolutionary information for DNA and RNA-binding site prediction. The SVM classifiers achieved 77.3% sensitivity and 79.3% specificity for prediction of DNA-binding residues, and 71.6% sensitivity and 78.7% specificity for RNA-binding site prediction.

Conclusions: Predictions at this level of accuracy may provide useful information for modelling protein-nucleic acid interactions in systems biology studies. We have thus developed a web-based tool called BindN+ (http://bioinfo.ggc.org/bindn+/) to make the SVM classifiers accessible to the research community.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Schematic diagram for extracting evolutionary information.
Figure 2
Figure 2
ROC analysis to show the effect of evolutionary information on prediction of DNA-binding residues.
Figure 3
Figure 3
ROC analysis to show the effect of evolutionary information on prediction of RNA-binding residues.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Sample output from the BindN+ web server.

References

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