Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge

Protein sequences can be classified based on their structure similarity and/or common evolutionary origin called structural class. Information on structural class is readily available, easing the protein structure and protein function probing. SCOP and CATH are two prominent classification schemes u...

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Main Authors: Hassan, R., Ahmad, A. S., Imrona, M., Kasim, S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: World Academy of Research in Science and Engineering 2019
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/90598/1/RohayantiHassan2019_LocalProteinStructures.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/90598/
http://dx.doi.org/10.30534/ijatcse/2019/3981.32019
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spelling my.utm.905982021-04-29T23:28:08Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/90598/ Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge Hassan, R. Ahmad, A. S. Imrona, M. Kasim, S. QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science Protein sequences can be classified based on their structure similarity and/or common evolutionary origin called structural class. Information on structural class is readily available, easing the protein structure and protein function probing. SCOP and CATH are two prominent classification schemes used to assign the structural class of proteins. Both schemes determine the structural class manually base on known protein tertiary structures. However, the quantity of known protein sequences is growing exponentially with respect to the quantity of known tertiary proteins structures. Although SCOP and CATH are examples of well-established databases that contain more reliable information of structural class, yet the lack of known structural class of protein due to the laborious wet-lab experimental routine limits the high-throughput structural class assignment. The fact that this is a tedious and time-consuming manually-determined method has further limited the structural class assignment. As a consequence, the assignment of structural class by computational method suffers from the arbitrated statistical infer-ence. Thus, this study aims to provide a structural class prediction method that can acquire the knowledge of local protein structures, derived from known excessive primary sequences, in order to produce high-throughput sequence-structure class assignment instead of the laborious experimental based method. This structural class prediction method is termed as SVM-LpsSCPred. World Academy of Research in Science and Engineering 2019 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/90598/1/RohayantiHassan2019_LocalProteinStructures.pdf Hassan, R. and Ahmad, A. S. and Imrona, M. and Kasim, S. (2019) Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge. International Journal of Advanced Trends in Computer Science and Engineering, 8 (1.3). pp. 196-201. ISSN 2278-3091 http://dx.doi.org/10.30534/ijatcse/2019/3981.32019 DOI: 10.30534/ijatcse/2019/3981.32019
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
spellingShingle QA75 Electronic computers. Computer science
Hassan, R.
Ahmad, A. S.
Imrona, M.
Kasim, S.
Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge
description Protein sequences can be classified based on their structure similarity and/or common evolutionary origin called structural class. Information on structural class is readily available, easing the protein structure and protein function probing. SCOP and CATH are two prominent classification schemes used to assign the structural class of proteins. Both schemes determine the structural class manually base on known protein tertiary structures. However, the quantity of known protein sequences is growing exponentially with respect to the quantity of known tertiary proteins structures. Although SCOP and CATH are examples of well-established databases that contain more reliable information of structural class, yet the lack of known structural class of protein due to the laborious wet-lab experimental routine limits the high-throughput structural class assignment. The fact that this is a tedious and time-consuming manually-determined method has further limited the structural class assignment. As a consequence, the assignment of structural class by computational method suffers from the arbitrated statistical infer-ence. Thus, this study aims to provide a structural class prediction method that can acquire the knowledge of local protein structures, derived from known excessive primary sequences, in order to produce high-throughput sequence-structure class assignment instead of the laborious experimental based method. This structural class prediction method is termed as SVM-LpsSCPred.
format Article
author Hassan, R.
Ahmad, A. S.
Imrona, M.
Kasim, S.
author_facet Hassan, R.
Ahmad, A. S.
Imrona, M.
Kasim, S.
author_sort Hassan, R.
title Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge
title_short Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge
title_full Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge
title_fullStr Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge
title_full_unstemmed Local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge
title_sort local protein structures to bridge sequence-structure knowledge
publisher World Academy of Research in Science and Engineering
publishDate 2019
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/90598/1/RohayantiHassan2019_LocalProteinStructures.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/90598/
http://dx.doi.org/10.30534/ijatcse/2019/3981.32019
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