4.6 Article

Duo: A Signature Based Method to Batch-Analyze Functional Similarities of Proteins

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.698322

Keywords

biological signature; protein; bacteria; Salmonella; hidden Markov models

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31730094, 31920103015]
  2. China Scholarship Council [201808320379]

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With the rapid advancement of sequencing technology, the demand for analyzing large sequencing data to predict protein function has become urgent. The development of Duo as a tool to batch-analyze functional similarities of predicted proteins provides a flexible and customizable solution for users. Duo has been successfully applied in screening for virulence associated proteins in bacterial genomes and shows potential for personalized protein function research in the future.
With the rapid advancement of sequencing technology, handling of large sequencing data to analyze for protein coding capacity and functionality of predicted proteins has become an urgent demand. There is a lack of simple and effective tools to functionally annotate large number of unknown proteins in a personalized and customized workflow. To address this, we developed Duo, which batch-analyze functional similarities of predicted proteins. Duo can screen query proteins with specific characteristics based on highly flexible and customizable reference inputs from the user. In the current study, Duo was applied to screen for virulence associated proteins in the genome-sequence of Salmonella Typhimurium. Based on the analysis, recommendation for choice of Seed_database in order to get a reasonable number of predicted proteins for further analysis, and recommendation for preparing a Reference_proteins set for Duo was given. Delta-bitscore analysis was shown to be useful tool to focus the follow-up on predicted proteins. A successful screen for virulence proteins in the bacterial genome-sequence was further performed in a selection of 32 pathogenic bacteria, documenting the ability of Duo to work on a broad collection of bacteria. We anticipate that Duo will be a useful auxiliary tool for personalized and customized protein function research in the future.

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