WildSpan: mining structured motifs from protein sequences

被引:8
|
作者
Hsu, Chen-Ming [2 ]
Chen, Chien-Yu [1 ]
Liu, Baw-Jhiune [3 ]
机构
[1] Natl Taiwan Univ, Dept Bioind Mechatron Engn, Taipei 106, Taiwan
[2] Ching Yun Univ, Dept Comp Sci & Informat Engn, Jhongli 320, Taiwan
[3] Yuan Ze Univ, Dept Comp Sci & Engn, Jhongli 320, Taiwan
来源
关键词
BIOLOGICAL SEQUENCES; EFFICIENT DISCOVERY; PATTERNS; IDENTIFICATION; CONSERVATION; PREDICTION; SIGNATURES; RESIDUES; DATABASE;
D O I
10.1186/1748-7188-6-6
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Background: Automatic extraction of motifs from biological sequences is an important research problem in study of molecular biology. For proteins, it is desired to discover sequence motifs containing a large number of wildcard symbols, as the residues associated with functional sites are usually largely separated in sequences. Discovering such patterns is time-consuming because abundant combinations exist when long gaps (a gap consists of one or more successive wildcards) are considered. Mining algorithms often employ constraints to narrow down the search space in order to increase efficiency. However, improper constraint models might degrade the sensitivity and specificity of the motifs discovered by computational methods. We previously proposed a new constraint model to handle large wildcard regions for discovering functional motifs of proteins. The patterns that satisfy the proposed constraint model are called W-patterns. A W-pattern is a structured motif that groups motif symbols into pattern blocks interleaved with large irregular gaps. Considering large gaps reflects the fact that functional residues are not always from a single region of protein sequences, and restricting motif symbols into clusters corresponds to the observation that short motifs are frequently present within protein families. To efficiently discover W-patterns for large-scale sequence annotation and function prediction, this paper first formally introduces the problem to solve and proposes an algorithm named WildSpan (sequential pattern mining across large wildcard regions) that incorporates several pruning strategies to largely reduce the mining cost. Results: WildSpan is shown to efficiently find W-patterns containing conserved residues that are far separated in sequences. We conducted experiments with two mining strategies, protein-based and family-based mining, to evaluate the usefulness of W-patterns and performance of WildSpan. The protein-based mining mode of WildSpan is developed for discovering functional regions of a single protein by referring to a set of related sequences (e. g. its homologues). The discovered W-patterns are used to characterize the protein sequence and the results are compared with the conserved positions identified by multiple sequence alignment (MSA). The family-based mining mode of WildSpan is developed for extracting sequence signatures for a group of related proteins (e. g. a protein family) for protein function classification. In this situation, the discovered W-patterns are compared with PROSITE patterns as well as the patterns generated by three existing methods performing the similar task. Finally, analysis on execution time of running WildSpan reveals that the proposed pruning strategy is effective in improving the scalability of the proposed algorithm. Conclusions: The mining results conducted in this study reveal that WildSpan is efficient and effective in discovering functional signatures of proteins directly from sequences. The proposed pruning strategy is effective in improving the scalability of WildSpan. It is demonstrated in this study that the W-patterns discovered by WildSpan provides useful information in characterizing protein sequences. The WildSpan executable and open source codes are available on the web (http://biominer.csie.cyu.edu.tw/wildspan).
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] WildSpan: mining structured motifs from protein sequences
    Chen-Ming Hsu
    Chien-Yu Chen
    Baw-Jhiune Liu
    [J]. Algorithms for Molecular Biology, 6
  • [2] Mining protein sequences for motifs
    Narasimhan, G
    Bu, CS
    Gao, YA
    Wang, XI
    Xu, N
    Mathee, K
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY, 2002, 9 (05) : 707 - 720
  • [3] Mining loosely structured motifs from biological data
    Fassetti, Fabio
    Greco, Gianluigi
    Terracina, Giorgio
    [J]. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON KNOWLEDGE AND DATA ENGINEERING, 2008, 20 (11) : 1472 - 1489
  • [4] Data mining for motifs in DNA sequences
    Bell, DA
    Guan, JW
    [J]. ROUGH SETS, FUZZY SETS, DATA MINING, AND GRANULAR COMPUTING, 2003, 2639 : 507 - 514
  • [5] Occurrence probability of structured motifs in random sequences
    Robin, S
    Daudin, JJ
    Richard, H
    Sagot, ME
    Schbath, S
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY, 2002, 9 (06) : 761 - 773
  • [6] Finding motifs in protein sequences
    Todd Richmond
    [J]. Genome Biology, 1 (3):
  • [7] PROTEIN SEQUENCES - HOMOLOGIES AND MOTIFS
    STERNBERG, MJE
    ISLAM, SA
    [J]. TRENDS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, 1991, 9 (09) : 300 - 302
  • [8] Occurrence of structured motifs in random sequences: Arbitrary number of boxes
    Stefanov, Valeri T.
    Robin, Stephane
    Schbath, Sophie
    [J]. DISCRETE APPLIED MATHEMATICS, 2011, 159 (08) : 826 - 831
  • [9] Waiting times for clumps of patterns and for structured motifs in random sequences
    Stefanov, V. T.
    Robin, S.
    Schbath, S.
    [J]. DISCRETE APPLIED MATHEMATICS, 2007, 155 (6-7) : 868 - 880
  • [10] An efficient algorithm for the identification of structured motifs in DNA promoter sequences
    Carvalho, AM
    Freitas, AT
    Oliveira, AL
    Sagot, MF
    [J]. IEEE-ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY AND BIOINFORMATICS, 2006, 3 (02) : 126 - 140