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Title

 

 

 

 

 

Prediction of functional engrailed homology-1 protein motif from sequence

Authors

 

Danielle S. Dalafave

Affiliation

 

Department of Physics, The College of New Jersey, Ewing, New Jersey, USA

Email

 

dalafave@tcnj.edu

Article Type

 

Hypothesis

Date

 

Received June 26, 2009; Revised August 10, 2009; Accepted September 11, 2009; Published December 02, 2009

 

Abstract

.

Prediction of functional peptide motifs from sequences is an important problem in bioinformatics. Experimental discovery of functional sequences is laborious. Searches for specific motifs within the increasing number of proteins available in public databases often involve extensive computer calculations. Short peptide motifs are especially hard to identify via currently available methods. Presented here is a simple and effective procedure to identify a short functional motif. The procedure is based on devising a scoring function using sequence properties. The procedure was applied on short engrailed homology-1 (eh1)-like motif. Eh1-like motif provides repressive functions by binding to the WD domain of the Gro/TLE transcriptional corepressors. Interactions of known eh1-like variants and the WD domain were modeled and studied. Sequence features crucial for the interactions, and thus the motif's functionality, were identified. A scoring function was devised based on the observed sequence features. The ability of the scoring function to discriminate between functional and nonfunctional sequences was tested on known eh1-like sequences, random sequences, and eh1-like sequences predicted by others using various bioinformatics tools. The scoring function expressed well a general relationship between sequences and their functionalities. It gave about 20% false positive findings. However, the scoring function reliably identified sequences that were not functional eh1-like motif. The procedure presented here may prove useful for predicting functional sequences of other short motifs. Given the importance of transcriptional regulation, this study on identification and evaluation of functional eh1-like sequences should facilitate further research on their transcriptional roles

 

Citation

 

Dalafave, Bioinformation 4(6): 229-232 (2009)

Edited by

 

P. Kangueane

 

ISSN

 

0973-2063

 

Publisher

 

Biomedical Informatics

License

This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. This is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.