54 research outputs found
Determining the Secondary Structure of Elapid Toxins using Multi-Layer Perceptrons and Kohonen Networks
In this paper, a two-stage neural network consisting of a feed-forward neural network and a Kohonen self-organizing map, has been used to predict secondary structure. We have applied our methods to determine the structure of 245 proteins containing neurotoxins, cytotoxins, cardiotoxins and three-finger toxins, derived from venoms of Elapid snakes. In doing so, the system achieved a Q3 score of 70%, which is quite remarkable
DeepSF: deep convolutional neural network for mapping protein sequences to folds
Motivation
Protein fold recognition is an important problem in structural
bioinformatics. Almost all traditional fold recognition methods use sequence
(homology) comparison to indirectly predict the fold of a tar get protein based
on the fold of a template protein with known structure, which cannot explain
the relationship between sequence and fold. Only a few methods had been
developed to classify protein sequences into a small number of folds due to
methodological limitations, which are not generally useful in practice.
Results
We develop a deep 1D-convolution neural network (DeepSF) to directly classify
any protein se quence into one of 1195 known folds, which is useful for both
fold recognition and the study of se quence-structure relationship. Different
from traditional sequence alignment (comparison) based methods, our method
automatically extracts fold-related features from a protein sequence of any
length and map it to the fold space. We train and test our method on the
datasets curated from SCOP1.75, yielding a classification accuracy of 80.4%. On
the independent testing dataset curated from SCOP2.06, the classification
accuracy is 77.0%. We compare our method with a top profile profile alignment
method - HHSearch on hard template-based and template-free modeling targets of
CASP9-12 in terms of fold recognition accuracy. The accuracy of our method is
14.5%-29.1% higher than HHSearch on template-free modeling targets and
4.5%-16.7% higher on hard template-based modeling targets for top 1, 5, and 10
predicted folds. The hidden features extracted from sequence by our method is
robust against sequence mutation, insertion, deletion and truncation, and can
be used for other protein pattern recognition problems such as protein
clustering, comparison and ranking.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figure
Distance-based Protein Folding Powered by Deep Learning
Contact-assisted protein folding has made very good progress, but two
challenges remain. One is accurate contact prediction for proteins lack of many
sequence homologs and the other is that time-consuming folding simulation is
often needed to predict good 3D models from predicted contacts. We show that
protein distance matrix can be predicted well by deep learning and then
directly used to construct 3D models without folding simulation at all. Using
distance geometry to construct 3D models from our predicted distance matrices,
we successfully folded 21 of the 37 CASP12 hard targets with a median family
size of 58 effective sequence homologs within 4 hours on a Linux computer of 20
CPUs. In contrast, contacts predicted by direct coupling analysis (DCA) cannot
fold any of them in the absence of folding simulation and the best CASP12 group
folded 11 of them by integrating predicted contacts into complex,
fragment-based folding simulation. The rigorous experimental validation on 15
CASP13 targets show that among the 3 hardest targets of new fold our
distance-based folding servers successfully folded 2 large ones with <150
sequence homologs while the other servers failed on all three, and that our ab
initio folding server also predicted the best, high-quality 3D model for a
large homology modeling target. Further experimental validation in CAMEO shows
that our ab initio folding server predicted correct fold for a membrane protein
of new fold with 200 residues and 229 sequence homologs while all the other
servers failed. These results imply that deep learning offers an efficient and
accurate solution for ab initio folding on a personal computer
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