4.6 Article

β Edge strands in protein structure prediction and aggregation

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages 2348-2359

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1110/ps.03234503

Keywords

decision tree; support vector machine; secondary structure prediction; machine learning

Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [SF16972] Funding Source: Medline
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [SF16972] Funding Source: researchfish

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It is well established that recognition between exposed edges of beta-sheets is an important mode of protein-protein interaction and can have pathological consequences; for instance, it has been linked to the aggregation of proteins into a fibrillar structure, which is associated with a number of predominantly neurode-generative disorders. A number of protective mechanisms have evolved in the edge strands of beta-sheets, preventing the aggregation and insolubility of most natural beta-sheet proteins. Such mechanisms are unfavorable in the interior of a beta-sheet. The problem of distinguishing edge strands from central strands based on sequence information alone is important in predicting residues and mutations likely to be involved in aggregation, and is also a first step in predicting folding topology. Here we report support vector machine (SVM) and decision tree methods developed to classify edge strands from central strands in a representative set of protein domains. Interestingly, rules generated by the decision tree method are in close agreement with our knowledge of protein structure and are potentially useful in a number of different biological applications. When trained on strands from proteins of known structure, using structure-based (Dictionary of Secondary Structure in Proteins) strand assignments, both methods achieved mean cross-validated, prediction accuracies of similar to78%. These accuracies were reduced when strand assignments from secondary structure prediction were used. Further investigation of this effect revealed that it could be explained by a significant reduction in the accuracy of standard secondary structure prediction methods for edge strands, in comparison with central strands.

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