A Neural Network for Predicting Protein Disorder using Amino Acid Hydropathy Values

Author(s):  
D.A. Stoffer ◽  
L.G. Volkert
Genes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 572
Author(s):  
Alan M. Luu ◽  
Jacob R. Leistico ◽  
Tim Miller ◽  
Somang Kim ◽  
Jun S. Song

Understanding the recognition of specific epitopes by cytotoxic T cells is a central problem in immunology. Although predicting binding between peptides and the class I Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) has had success, predicting interactions between T cell receptors (TCRs) and MHC class I-peptide complexes (pMHC) remains elusive. This paper utilizes a convolutional neural network model employing deep metric learning and multimodal learning to perform two critical tasks in TCR-epitope binding prediction: identifying the TCRs that bind a given epitope from a TCR repertoire, and identifying the binding epitope of a given TCR from a list of candidate epitopes. Our model can perform both tasks simultaneously and reveals that inconsistent preprocessing of TCR sequences can confound binding prediction. Applying a neural network interpretation method identifies key amino acid sequence patterns and positions within the TCR, important for binding specificity. Contrary to common assumption, known crystal structures of TCR-pMHC complexes show that the predicted salient amino acid positions are not necessarily the closest to the epitopes, implying that physical proximity may not be a good proxy for importance in determining TCR-epitope specificity. Our work thus provides an insight into the learned predictive features of TCR-epitope binding specificity and advances the associated classification tasks.


2021 ◽  
pp. 7831-7845
Author(s):  
Raghad Monther Eid, Eman K. Elsayed, Fatma T. Ghanam

Introduction: SARS-CoV-2 has become a worldwide pandemic that affects all aspects of life; therefore, numerous organizations and open exploration foundations focus their efforts on research for viable therapeutics. Given past experiences and involvement in SARS, the essential focus has been the Spike protein, considered as the perfect objective for COVID-19 immunotherapies. Most of the vaccines being developed target the spike proteins because this protein covers the virus and helps it invade human cells. Methods: Applications of deep neural network is a quickly expanding field now reaching many areas including proteomics. Results: To be precise, convolutional neural networks have been used for identifying the functional role of amino acid sequences, because of its ability to give nearly accurate results for multi-label classification problems. Here we present a modified convolutional deep learning model that can  identify if a given amino acid sequence is a spike protein or not based on the length of the sequence and the function of the protein, that will be done  with a short execution time and a relatively small error rate. Conclusion: CNN is an efficient tool at supervised multilabel classification problems


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (01) ◽  
pp. 1950004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chun Fang ◽  
Yoshitaka Moriwaki ◽  
Aikui Tian ◽  
Caihong Li ◽  
Kentaro Shimizu

Molecular recognition features (MoRFs) are key functional regions of intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), which play important roles in the molecular interaction network of cells and are implicated in many serious human diseases. Identifying MoRFs is essential for both functional studies of IDPs and drug design. This study adopts the cutting-edge machine learning method of artificial intelligence to develop a powerful model for improving MoRFs prediction. We proposed a method, named as en_DCNNMoRF (ensemble deep convolutional neural network-based MoRF predictor). It combines the outcomes of two independent deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) classifiers that take advantage of different features. The first, DCNNMoRF1, employs position-specific scoring matrix (PSSM) and 22 types of amino acid-related factors to describe protein sequences. The second, DCNNMoRF2, employs PSSM and 13 types of amino acid indexes to describe protein sequences. For both single classifiers, DCNN with a novel two-dimensional attention mechanism was adopted, and an average strategy was added to further process the output probabilities of each DCNN model. Finally, en_DCNNMoRF combined the two models by averaging their final scores. When compared with other well-known tools applied to the same datasets, the accuracy of the novel proposed method was comparable with that of state-of-the-art methods. The related web server can be accessed freely via http://vivace.bi.a.u-tokyo.ac.jp:8008/fang/en_MoRFs.php .


2014 ◽  
Vol 548-549 ◽  
pp. 1265-1269
Author(s):  
Yun Sik Hwang ◽  
Byeong Joo Jun ◽  
Tae Seon Yoon

As the stage of bioinformatics has been upgraded, classification of certain pathogen has been improved into a new manner. The main topic of this research is genetic singularity of HCV (Hepatitis C Virus) and our objective is to assay features of the HCV's amino acid under usage of Support Vector Machine (SVM) algorithm. HCV data used in our experiment has 10 kinds of sequences and 257 kinds of data. According to data analysis, some peculiar genetic patterns of HCV’s linearity that discord pre-existing neural network and C5.0 were found.


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