12 research outputs found

    Identification of functionally related enzymes by learning-to-rank methods

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    Enzyme sequences and structures are routinely used in the biological sciences as queries to search for functionally related enzymes in online databases. To this end, one usually departs from some notion of similarity, comparing two enzymes by looking for correspondences in their sequences, structures or surfaces. For a given query, the search operation results in a ranking of the enzymes in the database, from very similar to dissimilar enzymes, while information about the biological function of annotated database enzymes is ignored. In this work we show that rankings of that kind can be substantially improved by applying kernel-based learning algorithms. This approach enables the detection of statistical dependencies between similarities of the active cleft and the biological function of annotated enzymes. This is in contrast to search-based approaches, which do not take annotated training data into account. Similarity measures based on the active cleft are known to outperform sequence-based or structure-based measures under certain conditions. We consider the Enzyme Commission (EC) classification hierarchy for obtaining annotated enzymes during the training phase. The results of a set of sizeable experiments indicate a consistent and significant improvement for a set of similarity measures that exploit information about small cavities in the surface of enzymes

    Classification in biological networks with hypergraphlet kernels

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    MOTIVATION: Biological and cellular systems are often modeled as graphs in which vertices represent objects of interest (genes, proteins and drugs) and edges represent relational ties between these objects (binds-to, interacts-with and regulates). This approach has been highly successful owing to the theory, methodology and software that support analysis and learning on graphs. Graphs, however, suffer from information loss when modeling physical systems due to their inability to accurately represent multiobject relationships. Hypergraphs, a generalization of graphs, provide a framework to mitigate information loss and unify disparate graph-based methodologies. RESULTS: We present a hypergraph-based approach for modeling biological systems and formulate vertex classification, edge classification and link prediction problems on (hyper)graphs as instances of vertex classification on (extended, dual) hypergraphs. We then introduce a novel kernel method on vertex- and edge-labeled (colored) hypergraphs for analysis and learning. The method is based on exact and inexact (via hypergraph edit distances) enumeration of hypergraphlets; i.e. small hypergraphs rooted at a vertex of interest. We empirically evaluate this method on fifteen biological networks and show its potential use in a positive-unlabeled setting to estimate the interactome sizes in various species. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: https://github.com/jlugomar/hypergraphlet-kernels. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online

    Classification in biological networks with hypergraphlet kernels

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    Abstract Motivation Biological and cellular systems are often modeled as graphs in which vertices represent objects of interest (genes, proteins and drugs) and edges represent relational ties between these objects (binds-to, interacts-with and regulates). This approach has been highly successful owing to the theory, methodology and software that support analysis and learning on graphs. Graphs, however, suffer from information loss when modeling physical systems due to their inability to accurately represent multiobject relationships. Hypergraphs, a generalization of graphs, provide a framework to mitigate information loss and unify disparate graph-based methodologies. Results We present a hypergraph-based approach for modeling biological systems and formulate vertex classification, edge classification and link prediction problems on (hyper)graphs as instances of vertex classification on (extended, dual) hypergraphs. We then introduce a novel kernel method on vertex- and edge-labeled (colored) hypergraphs for analysis and learning. The method is based on exact and inexact (via hypergraph edit distances) enumeration of hypergraphlets; i.e. small hypergraphs rooted at a vertex of interest. We empirically evaluate this method on fifteen biological networks and show its potential use in a positive-unlabeled setting to estimate the interactome sizes in various species.This work was partially supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) [DBI-1458477], National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 MH105524], the Indiana University Precision Health Initiative, the European Research Council (ERC) [Consolidator Grant 770827], UCL Computer Science, the Slovenian Research Agency project [J1-8155], the Serbian Ministry of Education and Science Project [III44006] and the Prostate Project.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    The loss and gain of functional amino acid residues is a common mechanism causing human inherited disease

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    Elucidating the precise molecular events altered by disease-causing genetic variants represents a major challenge in translational bioinformatics. To this end, many studies have investigated the structural and functional impact of amino acid substitutions. Most of these studies were however limited in scope to either individual molecular functions or were concerned with functional effects (e.g. deleterious vs. neutral) without specifically considering possible molecular alterations. The recent growth of structural, molecular and genetic data presents an opportunity for more comprehensive studies to consider the structural environment of a residue of interest, to hypothesize specific molecular effects of sequence variants and to statistically associate these effects with genetic disease. In this study, we analyzed data sets of disease-causing and putatively neutral human variants mapped to protein 3D structures as part of a systematic study of the loss and gain of various types of functional attribute potentially underlying pathogenic molecular alterations. We first propose a formal model to assess probabilistically function-impacting variants. We then develop an array of structure-based functional residue predictors, evaluate their performance, and use them to quantify the impact of disease-causing amino acid substitutions on catalytic activity, metal binding, macromolecular binding, ligand binding, allosteric regulation and post-translational modifications. We show that our methodology generates actionable biological hypotheses for up to 41% of disease-causing genetic variants mapped to protein structures suggesting that it can be reliably used to guide experimental validation. Our results suggest that a significant fraction of disease-causing human variants mapping to protein structures are function-altering both in the presence and absence of stability disruption

    Identification and Functional Annotation of Alternatively Spliced Isoforms

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    Alternative splicing is a key mechanism for increasing the complexity of transcriptome and proteome in eukaryotic cells. A large portion of multi-exon genes in humans undergo alternative splicing, and this can have significant functional consequences as the proteins translated from alternatively spliced mRNA might have different amino acid sequences and structures. The study of alternative splicing events has been accelerated by the next-generation sequencing technology. However, reconstruction of transcripts from short-read RNA sequencing is not sufficiently accurate. Recent progress in single-molecule long-read sequencing has provided researchers alternative ways to help solve this problem. With the help of both short and long RNA sequencing technologies, tens of thousands of splice isoforms have been catalogued in humans and other species, but relatively few of the protein products of splice isoforms have been characterized functionally, structurally and biochemically. The scope of this dissertation includes using short and long RNA sequencing reads together for the purpose of transcript reconstruction, and using high-throughput RNA-sequencing data and gene ontology functional annotations on gene level to predict functions for alternatively spliced isoforms in mouse and human. In the first chapter, I give an introduction of alternative splicing and discuss the existing studies where next generation sequencing is used for transcript identification. Then, I define the isoform function prediction problem, and explain how it differs from better known gene function prediction problem. In the second chapter of this dissertation, I describe our study where the overall transcriptome of kidney is studied using both long reads from PacBio platform and RNA-seq short reads from Illumina platform. We used short reads to validate full-length transcripts found by long PacBio reads, and generated two high quality sets of transcript isoforms that are expressed in glomerular and tubulointerstitial compartments. In the third chapter, I describe our generic framework, where we implemented and evaluated several related algorithms for isoform function prediction for mouse isoforms. We tested these algorithms through both computational evaluation and experimental validation of the predicted ‘responsible’ isoform(s) and the predicted disparate functions of the isoforms of Cdkn2a and of Anxa6. Our algorithm is the first effort to predict and differentiate isoform functions through large-scale genomic data integration. In the fourth chapter, I present the extension of isoform function prediction study to the protein coding isoforms in human. We used a similar multiple instance learning (MIL)-based approach for predicting the function of protein coding splice variants in human. We evaluated our predictions using literature evidence of ADAM15, LMNA/C, and DMXL2 genes. And in the fifth and final chapter, I give a summary of previous chapters and outline the future directions for alternatively spliced isoform reconstruction and function prediction studies.PHDBioinformaticsUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144017/1/ridvan_1.pd

    PRETICTIVE BIOINFORMATIC METHODS FOR ANALYZING GENES AND PROTEINS

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    Since large amounts of biological data are generated using various high-throughput technologies, efficient computational methods are important for understanding the biological meanings behind the complex data. Machine learning is particularly appealing for biological knowledge discovery. Tissue-specific gene expression and protein sumoylation play essential roles in the cell and are implicated in many human diseases. Protein destabilization is a common mechanism by which mutations cause human diseases. In this study, machine learning approaches were developed for predicting human tissue-specific genes, protein sumoylation sites and protein stability changes upon single amino acid substitutions. Relevant biological features were selected for input vector encoding, and machine learning algorithms, including Random Forests and Support Vector Machines, were used for classifier construction. The results suggest that the approaches give rise to more accurate predictions than previous studies and can provide valuable information for further experimental studies. Moreover, seeSUMO and MuStab web servers were developed to make the classifiers accessible to the biological research community. Structure-based methods can be used to predict the effects of amino acid substitutions on protein function and stability. The nonsynonymous Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (nsSNPs) located at the protein binding interface have dramatic effects on protein-protein interactions. To model the effects, the nsSNPs at the interfaces of 264 protein-protein complexes were mapped on the protein structures using homology-based methods. The results suggest that disease-causing nsSNPs tend to destabilize the electrostatic component of the binding energy and nsSNPs at conserved positions have significant effects on binding energy changes. The structure-based approach was developed to quantitatively assess the effects of amino acid substitutions on protein stability and protein-protein interaction. It was shown that the structure-based analysis could help elucidate the mechanisms by which mutations cause human genetic disorders. These new bioinformatic methods can be used to analyze some interesting genes and proteins for human genetic research and improve our understanding of their molecular mechanisms underlying human diseases
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