Methods of remote homology detection can be combined to increase coverage by 10% in the midnight zone

被引:27
作者
Reid, Adam James [1 ]
Yeats, Corin [1 ]
Orengo, Christine Anne [1 ]
机构
[1] UCL, Dept Biochem & Mol Biol, London WC1E 6BT, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
HIDDEN MARKOV-MODELS; SEQUENCE; DATABASE; PROTEINS; CLASSIFICATION; ALIGNMENTS; FAMILIES; COMPASS; TOOL;
D O I
10.1093/bioinformatics/btm355
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Motivation: A recent development in sequence- based remote homologue detection is the introduction of profile - profile comparison methods. These are more powerful than previous technologies and can detect potentially homologous relationships missed by structural classifications such as CATH and SCOP. As structural classifications traditionally act as the gold standard of homology this poses a challenge in benchmarking them. Results: We present a novel approach which allows an accurate benchmark of these methods against the CATH structural classification. We then apply this approach to assess the accuracy of a range of publicly available methods for remote homology detection including several profile-profile methods (COMPASS, HHSearch, PRC) from two perspectives. First, in distinguishing homologous domains from non-homologues and second, in annotating proteomes with structural domain families. PRC is shown to be the best method for distinguishing homologues. We show that SAM is the best practical method for annotating genomes, whilst using COMPASS for the most remote homologues would increase coverage. Finally, we introduce a simple approach to increase the sensitivity of remote homologue detection by up to 10%. This is achieved by combining multiple methods with a jury vote.
引用
收藏
页码:2353 / 2360
页数:8
相关论文
共 29 条
  • [1] ALTSCHUL SF, 1997, NUCLEIC ACIDS RES, V25, P3402
  • [2] SCOOP: a simple method for identification of novel protein superfamily relationships
    Bateman, Alex
    Finn, Robert D.
    [J]. BIOINFORMATICS, 2007, 23 (07) : 809 - 814
  • [3] Assessing sequence comparison methods with reliable structurally identified distant evolutionary relationships
    Brenner, SE
    Chothia, C
    Hubbard, TJP
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1998, 95 (11) : 6073 - 6078
  • [4] On single and multiple models of protein families for the detection of remote sequence relationships
    Casbon, JA
    Saqi, MAS
    [J]. BMC BIOINFORMATICS, 2006, 7 (1)
  • [5] THE RELATION BETWEEN THE DIVERGENCE OF SEQUENCE AND STRUCTURE IN PROTEINS
    CHOTHIA, C
    LESK, AM
    [J]. EMBO JOURNAL, 1986, 5 (04) : 823 - 826
  • [6] Hidden Markov models
    Eddy, SR
    [J]. CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 1996, 6 (03) : 361 - 365
  • [7] Pfam:: clans, web tools and services
    Finn, Robert D.
    Mistry, Jaina
    Schuster-Bockler, Benjamin
    Griffiths-Jones, Sam
    Hollich, Volker
    Lassmann, Timo
    Moxon, Simon
    Marshall, Mhairi
    Khanna, Ajay
    Durbin, Richard
    Eddy, Sean R.
    Sonnhammer, Erik L. L.
    Bateman, Alex
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2006, 34 : D247 - D251
  • [8] Assignment of homology to genome sequences using a library of hidden Markov models that represent all proteins of known structure
    Gough, J
    Karplus, K
    Hughey, R
    Chothia, C
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2001, 313 (04) : 903 - 919
  • [9] The CATH domain structure database: new protocols and classification levels give a more comprehensive resource for exploring evolution
    Greene, Lesley H.
    Lewis, Tony E.
    Addou, Sarah
    Cuff, Alison
    Dallman, Tim
    Dibley, Mark
    Redfern, Oliver
    Pearl, Frances
    Nambudiry, Rekha
    Reid, Adam
    Sillitoe, Ian
    Yeats, Corin
    Thornton, Janet M.
    Orengo, Christine A.
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2007, 35 : D291 - D297
  • [10] Quantifying the similarities within fold space
    Harrison, A
    Pearl, F
    Mott, R
    Thornton, J
    Orengo, C
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2002, 323 (05) : 909 - 926