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1.
Electron. j. biotechnol ; 19(2): 9-13, Mar. 2016. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-782610

ABSTRACT

Background: Protein structural alignment is one of the most fundamental and crucial areas of research in the domain of computational structural biology. Comparison of a protein structure with known structures helps to classify it as a new or belonging to a known group of proteins. This, in turn, is useful to determine the function of protein, its evolutionary relationship with other protein molecules and grasping principles underlying protein architecture and folding. Results: A large number of protein structure alignment methods are available. Each protein structure alignment tool has its own strengths and weaknesses that need to be highlighted. We compared and presented results ofsix most popular and publically available servers for protein structure comparison. These web-based servers were compared with the respect to functionality (features provided by these servers) and accuracy (how well the structural comparison is performed). The CATH was used as a reference. The results showed that overall CE was top performer. DALI and PhyreStorm showed similar results whereas PDBeFold showed the lowest performance. In case of few secondary structural elements, CE, DALI and PhyreStorm gave 100% success rate. Conclusion: Overall none of the structural alignment servers showed 100% success rate. Studies of overall performance, effect of mainly alpha and effect of mainly beta showed consistent performance. CE, DALI, FatCat and PhyreStorm showed more than 90% success rate.


Subject(s)
Protein Conformation , Software , Sequence Alignment/methods
2.
Indian J Biochem Biophys ; 2012 Feb; 49(1): 49-54
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-140218

ABSTRACT

A novel phytase with a molecular mass of 14 kDa was isolated from fresh fruiting bodies of the common edible mushroom Volvariella volvacea (Straw mushroom). The isolation procedure involved successive chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, CM-cellulose, Affi-gel blue gel, Q-Sepharose and Superdex-75. The enzyme was a monomeric protein and was unadsorbed on DEAE-cellulose, CM-cellulose and Affi-gel blue gel, but was adsorbed on Q-Sepharose. The enzyme was purified 51.6-fold from the crude extract with 25.9% yield. Its N-terminal amino acid sequence GEDNEHDTQA exhibited low homology to the other reported phytases. The optimal pH and temperature of the purified enzyme was 5 and 45oC, respectively. The enzyme was quite stable over the pH range of 3.0 to 9.0 with less than 30% change in its activity, suggesting that it can be used in a very wide pH range. The enzyme exhibited broad substrate selectivity towards various phosphorylated compounds, but lacked antifungal activity against tested plant pathogens.


Subject(s)
6-Phytase/chemistry , 6-Phytase/isolation & purification , Adaptation, Physiological , Chromatography, DEAE-Cellulose/methods , Enzyme Stability , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Molecular Weight , Sepharose/chemistry , Sequence Alignment/methods , Substrate Specificity , Temperature , Triazines/chemistry , Volvariella/enzymology
3.
Indian J Biochem Biophys ; 2011 June; 48(3): 164-169
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-135315

ABSTRACT

The 3D structure of enoyl reductase (ER) domain generated by the SWISS MODEL server contains the 2-nitropropane dioxygenase (2NPD) structure displaying the TIM barrel fold. Though TIM barrel fold is made up of both main and inserted domains, in our study, we could only predict the structure of the main domain, which had central barrel of eight β-strands surrounded by eight α-helices. Superimposition of the 2NPD region of ER domain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv on to the corresponding region of 2UVA_G revealed a good structural alignment between the two, suggesting this template to be a good structural homologue. Among various herbal ligands that were screened as inhibitors, daucosterol was found to bind in closest proximity to the flavin mono nucleotide (FMN) binding site with the lowest docking energy


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Sequence , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Binding Sites , Dioxygenases/chemistry , Enoyl-(Acyl-Carrier-Protein) Reductase (NADH)/chemistry , Fatty Acid Synthases/chemistry , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Secondary , Sequence Alignment/methods , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid
4.
J Biosci ; 2007 Aug; 32(5): 921-8
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-110684

ABSTRACT

Protein structural alignments are generally considered as 'golden standard' for the alignment at the level of amino acid residues. In this study we have compared the quality of pairwise and multiple structural alignments of about 5900 homologous proteins from 718 families of known 3-D structures. We observe shifts in the alignment of regular secondary structural elements (helices and strands) between pairwise and multiple structural alignments. The differences between pairwise and multiple structural alignments within helical and beta-strand regions often correspond to 4 and 2 residue positions respectively. Such shifts correspond approximately to "one turn" of these regular secondary structures. We have performed manual analysis explicitly on the family of protein kinases. We note shifts of one or two turns in helix-helix alignments obtained using pairwise and multiple structural alignments. Investigations on the quality of the equivalent helix-helix, strand-strand pairs in terms of their residue side-chain accessibilities have been made. Our results indicate that the quality of the pairwise alignments is comparable to that of the multiple structural alignments and, in fact, is often better. We propose that pairwise alignment of protein structures should also be used in formulation of methods for structure prediction and evolutionary analysis.


Subject(s)
Protein Kinases/chemistry , Protein Structure, Secondary , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Alignment/methods , Structural Homology, Protein
5.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 6(4): 983-999, 2007. ilus, tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-520052

ABSTRACT

Most molecular analyses, including phylogenetic inference, are based on sequence alignments. We present an algorithm that estimates relatedness between biomolecules without the requirement of sequence alignment by using a protein frequency matrix that is reduced by singular value decomposition (SVD), in a latent semantic index information retrieval system. Two databases were used: one with 832 proteins from 13 mitochondrial gene families and another composed of 1000 sequences from nine types of proteins retrieved from GenBank. Firstly, 208 sequences from the first database and 200 from the second were randomly selected and compared using edit distance between each pair of sequences and respective cosines and Euclidean distances from SVD. Correlation between cosine and edit distance was -0.32 (P < 0.01) and between Euclidean distance and edit distance was +0.70 (P < 0.01). In order to check the ability of SVD in classifying sequences according to their categories, we used a sample of 202 sequences from the 13 gene families as queries (test set), and the other proteins (630) were used to generate the frequency matrix (training set). The classification algorithm applies a voting scheme based on the five most similar sequences with each query. With a 3-peptide frequency matrix, all 202 queries were correctly classified (accuracy = 100%). This algorithm is very attractive, because sequence alignments are neither generated nor required. In order to achieve results similar to those obtained with edit distance analysis, we recommend that Euclidean distance be used as a similarity measure for protein sequences in latent semantic indexing methods.


Subject(s)
Sequence Alignment/methods , Semantics , Algorithms , Amino Acid Sequence , Databases, Protein , Proteins/chemistry
6.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 6(4): 964-982, 2007. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-520053

ABSTRACT

Multiple sequence alignment plays an important role in molecular sequence analysis. An alignment is the arrangement of two (pairwise alignment) or more (multiple alignment) sequences of ‘residues’ (nucleotides or amino acids) that maximizes the similarities between them. Algorithmically, the problem consists of opening and extending gaps in the sequences to maximize an objective function (measurement of similarity). A simple genetic algorithm was developed and implemented in the software MSA-GA. Genetic algorithms, a class of evolutionary algorithms, are well suited for problems of this nature since residues and gaps are discrete units. An evolutionary algorithm cannot compete in terms of speed with progressive alignment methods but it has the advantage of being able to correct for initially misaligned sequences; which is not possible with the progressive method. This was shown using the BaliBase benchmark, where Clustal-W alignments were used to seed the initial population in MSA-GA, improving outcome. Alignment scoring functions still constitute an open field of research, and it is important to develop methods that simplify the testing of new functions. A general evolutionary framework for testing and implementing different scoring functions was developed. The results show that a simple genetic algorithm is capable of optimizing an alignment without the need of the excessively complex operators used in prior study. The clear distinction between objective function and genetic algorithms used in MSA-GA makes extending and/or replacing objective functions a trivial task.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Sequence Alignment/methods , Software , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Computational Biology , Evolution, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Proteins/chemistry
7.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 5(1): 143-153, Mar. 31, 2006. graf, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-449137

ABSTRACT

A great effort has been made to identify and map a large set of single nucleotide polymorphisms. The goal is to determine human DNA variants that contribute most significantly to population variation in each trait. Different algorithms and software packages, such as PolyBayes and PolyPhred, have been developed to address this problem. We present strategies to detect single nucleotide polymorphisms, using chromatogram analysis and consensi of multiple aligned sequences. The algorithms were tested using HIV datasets, and the results were compared with those produced by PolyBayes and PolyPhred using the same dataset. Our algorithms produced significantly better results than these two software packages.


Subject(s)
HIV , Algorithms , Sequence Alignment/methods , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics , Software , Humans
8.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 5(1): 127-137, Mar. 31, 2006. ilus, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-449139

ABSTRACT

Homology-derived secondary structure of proteins (HSSP) is a well-known database of multiple sequence alignments (MSAs) which merges information of protein sequences and their three-dimensional structures. It is available for all proteins whose structure is deposited in the PDB. It is also used by STING and (Java)Protein Dossier to calculate and present relative entropy as a measure of the degree of conservation for each residue of proteins whose structure has been solved and deposited in the PDB. However, if the STING and (Java)Protein Dossier are to provide support for analysis of protein structures modeled in computers or being experimentally solved but not yet deposited in the PDB, then we need a new method for building alignments having a flavor of HSSP alignments (myMSAr). The present study describes a new method and its corresponding databank (SH2QS--database of sequences homologue to the query [structure-having] sequence). Our main interest in making myMSAr was to measure the degree of residue conservation for a given query sequence, regardless of whether it has a corresponding structure deposited in the PDB. In this study, we compare the measurement of residue conservation provided by corresponding alignments produced by HSSP and SH2QS. As a case study, we also present two biologically relevant examples, the first one highlighting the equivalence of analysis of the degree of residue conservation by using HSSP or SH2QS alignments, and the second one presenting the degree of residue conservation for a structure modeled in a computer, which , as a consequence, does not have an alignment reported by HSSP.


Subject(s)
Humans , Sequence Alignment/methods , Protein Structure, Secondary/genetics , Conserved Sequence/genetics , Entropy , Models, Genetic , Amino Acid Sequence/genetics
9.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 5(2): 284-308, 2006. tab, graf, ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-442569

ABSTRACT

We modeled the problem of identifying how close two proteins are structurally by measuring the dissimilarity of their contact maps. These contact maps are colored images, in which the chromatic information encodes the chemical nature of the contacts. We studied two conceptually distinct image-processing algorithms to measure the dissimilarity between these contact maps; one was a content-based image retrieval method, and the other was based on image registration. In experiments with contact maps constructed from the protein data bank, our approach was able to identify, with greater than 80% precision, instances of monomers of apolipoproteins, globins, plastocyanins, retinol binding proteins and thioredoxins, among the monomers of Protein Data Bank Select. The image registration approach was only slightly more accurate than the content-based image retrieval approach.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Sequence Alignment/methods , Protein Conformation , Models, Chemical , Proteins/chemistry , Computer Simulation , Sequence Analysis, Protein , Models, Molecular , Structure-Activity Relationship
10.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 4(3): 563-570, 2005. ilus
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-444955

ABSTRACT

There are many bioinformatics tools that deal with input/output (I/O) issues by using filing systems from the most common operating systems, such as Linux or MS Windows. However, as data volumes increase, there is a need for more efficient disk access, ad hoc memory management and specific page-replacement policies. We propose a device driver that can be used by multiple applications. It keeps the application code unchanged, providing a non-intrusive and flexible strategy for I/O calls that may be adopted in a straightforward manner. With our approach, database developers can define their own I/O management strategies. We used our device driver to manage Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) I/O calls. Based on preliminary experimental results with National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) BLAST, this approach can provide database management systems-like data management features, which may be used for BLAST and many other computational biology applications.


Subject(s)
Humans , Algorithms , Sequence Alignment/methods , Databases, Factual , Computational Biology/methods , Database Management Systems , Base Sequence
11.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 4(3): 543-552, 2005. ilus, graf, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-444957

ABSTRACT

Reconfigurable systolic arrays can be adapted to efficiently resolve a wide spectrum of computational problems; parallelism is naturally explored in systolic arrays and reconfigurability allows for redefinition of the interconnections and operations even during run time (dynamically). We present a reconfigurable systolic architecture that can be applied for the efficient treatment of several dynamic programming methods for resolving well-known problems, such as global and local sequence alignment, approximate string matching and longest common subsequence. The dynamicity of the reconfigurability was found to be useful for practical applications in the construction of sequence alignments. A VHDL (VHSIC hardware description language) version of this new architecture was implemented on an APEX FPGA (Field programmable gate array). It would be several magnitudes faster than the software algorithm alternatives.


Subject(s)
Humans , Algorithms , Sequence Alignment/methods , Computational Biology/methods , Software , Time Factors , Models, Genetic , Computer Simulation
12.
Genet. mol. res. (Online) ; 4(4): 668-674, 2005. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-444858

ABSTRACT

Penaeid shrimps are an important resource in crustacean fisheries, representing more than the half of the gross production of shrimp worldwide. In the present study, we used a sample of wide-ranging diversity (41 shrimp species) and two mitochondrial markers (758 bp) to clarify the evolutionary relationships among Penaeidae genera. Three different methodologies of tree reconstruction were employed in the study: maximum likelihood, neighbor joining and Bayesian analysis. Our results suggest that the old Penaeus genus is monophyletic and that the inclusion of the Solenocera genus within the Penaeidae family remains uncertain. With respect to Metapenaeopsis monophyly, species of this genus appeared clustered, but with a nonsignificant bootstrap value. These results elucidate some features of the unclear evolution of Penaeidae and may contribute to the taxonomic characterization of this family.


Subject(s)
Animals , Genetic Variation , Evolution, Molecular , Phylogeny , Mitochondria/genetics , Penaeidae/genetics , Algorithms , Sequence Alignment/methods , Electron Transport Complex I/genetics , Likelihood Functions , Genetic Markers , Penaeidae/classification , /genetics , Bayes Theorem
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