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    Efficient protein alignment algorithm for protein search

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    © 2010 Lu et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licens

    Efficient search and comparison algorithms for 3D protein binding site retrieval and structure alignment from large-scale databases

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    Finding similar 3D structures is crucial for discovering potential structural, evolutionary, and functional relationships among proteins. As the number of known protein structures has dramatically increased, traditional methods can no longer provide the life science community with the adequate informatics capability needed to conduct large-scale and complex analyses. A suite of high-throughput and accurate protein structure search and comparison methods is essential. To meet the needs of the community, we develop several bioinformatics methods for protein binding site comparison and global structure alignment. First, we developed an efficient protein binding site search that is based on extracting geometric features both locally and globally. The main idea of this work was to capture spatial relationships among landmarks of binding site surfaces and bfuild a vocabulary of visual words to represent the characteristics of the surfaces. A vector model was then used to speed up the search of similar surfaces that share similar visual words with the query interface. Second, we developed an approach for accurate protein binding site comparison. Our algorithm provides an accurate binding site alignment by applying a two-level heuristic process which progressively refines alignment results from coarse surface point level to accurate residue atom level. This setting allowed us to explore different combinations of pairs of corresponding residues, thus improving the alignment quality of the binding site surfaces. Finally, we introduced a parallel algorithm for global protein structure alignment. Specifically, to speed up the time-consuming structure alignment process of protein 3D structures, we designed a parallel protein structure alignment framework to exploit the parallelism of Graphics Processing Units (GPUs). As a general-purpose GPU platform, the framework is capable of parallelizing traditional structure alignment algorithms. Our findings can be applied in various research areas, such as prediction of protein inte

    Towards Reliable Automatic Protein Structure Alignment

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    A variety of methods have been proposed for structure similarity calculation, which are called structure alignment or superposition. One major shortcoming in current structure alignment algorithms is in their inherent design, which is based on local structure similarity. In this work, we propose a method to incorporate global information in obtaining optimal alignments and superpositions. Our method, when applied to optimizing the TM-score and the GDT score, produces significantly better results than current state-of-the-art protein structure alignment tools. Specifically, if the highest TM-score found by TMalign is lower than (0.6) and the highest TM-score found by one of the tested methods is higher than (0.5), there is a probability of (42%) that TMalign failed to find TM-scores higher than (0.5), while the same probability is reduced to (2%) if our method is used. This could significantly improve the accuracy of fold detection if the cutoff TM-score of (0.5) is used. In addition, existing structure alignment algorithms focus on structure similarity alone and simply ignore other important similarities, such as sequence similarity. Our approach has the capacity to incorporate multiple similarities into the scoring function. Results show that sequence similarity aids in finding high quality protein structure alignments that are more consistent with eye-examined alignments in HOMSTRAD. Even when structure similarity itself fails to find alignments with any consistency with eye-examined alignments, our method remains capable of finding alignments highly similar to, or even identical to, eye-examined alignments.Comment: Peer-reviewed and presented as part of the 13th Workshop on Algorithms in Bioinformatics (WABI2013

    Automated Protein Structure Classification: A Survey

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    Classification of proteins based on their structure provides a valuable resource for studying protein structure, function and evolutionary relationships. With the rapidly increasing number of known protein structures, manual and semi-automatic classification is becoming ever more difficult and prohibitively slow. Therefore, there is a growing need for automated, accurate and efficient classification methods to generate classification databases or increase the speed and accuracy of semi-automatic techniques. Recognizing this need, several automated classification methods have been developed. In this survey, we overview recent developments in this area. We classify different methods based on their characteristics and compare their methodology, accuracy and efficiency. We then present a few open problems and explain future directions.Comment: 14 pages, Technical Report CSRG-589, University of Toront
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