Title
Protein disorder prediction by condensed PSSM considering propensity for order or disorder.
Abstract
More and more disordered regions have been discovered in protein sequences, and many of them are found to be functionally significant. Previous studies reveal that disordered regions of a protein can be predicted by its primary structure, the amino acid sequence. One observation that has been widely accepted is that ordered regions usually have compositional bias toward hydrophobic amino acids, and disordered regions are toward charged amino acids. Recent studies further show that employing evolutionary information such as position specific scoring matrices (PSSMs) improves the prediction accuracy of protein disorder. As more and more machine learning techniques have been introduced to protein disorder detection, extracting more useful features with biological insights attracts more attention.This paper first studies the effect of a condensed position specific scoring matrix with respect to physicochemical properties (PSSMP) on the prediction accuracy, where the PSSMP is derived by merging several amino acid columns of a PSSM belonging to a certain property into a single column. Next, we decompose each conventional physicochemical property of amino acids into two disjoint groups which have a propensity for order and disorder respectively, and show by experiments that some of the new properties perform better than their parent properties in predicting protein disorder. In order to get an effective and compact feature set on this problem, we propose a hybrid feature selection method that inherits the efficiency of uni-variant analysis and the effectiveness of the stepwise feature selection that explores combinations of multiple features. The experimental results show that the selected feature set improves the performance of a classifier built with Radial Basis Function Networks (RBFN) in comparison with the feature set constructed with PSSMs or PSSMPs that adopt simply the conventional physicochemical properties.Distinguishing disordered regions from ordered regions in protein sequences facilitates the exploration of protein structures and functions. Results based on independent testing data reveal that the proposed predicting model DisPSSMP performs the best among several of the existing packages doing similar tasks, without either under-predicting or over-predicting the disordered regions. Furthermore, the selected properties are demonstrated to be useful in finding discriminating patterns for order/disorder classification.
Year
DOI
Venue
2006
10.1186/1471-2105-7-319
BMC Bioinformatics
Keywords
Field
DocType
algorithms,proteins,amino acid sequence,protein sequence,radial basis function network,computer simulation,protein structure,bioinformatics,feature selection,microarrays,cluster analysis,machine learning,amino acid,prediction model
Position-Specific Scoring Matrices,Radial basis function network,Biology,Feature selection,Amino acid,Protein primary structure,Bioinformatics,Genetics,DNA microarray,Peptide sequence,Evolutionary information
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
7
1
1471-2105
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
60
1.60
17
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Chung-Tsai Su1773.95
Chien-Yu Chen236729.24
Yu-Yen Ou325216.78