scholarly journals Performance Analysis of Deep Learning Methods for Protein Contact Prediction in CASP13

2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Romina Valdez ◽  
Khevin Roig ◽  
Diego P. Pinto-Roa ◽  
Jose Colbes

Protein structure prediction is one of the most important problems in Computational Biology; and consists of determining the 3D structure of a protein given its amino acid sequence. A key component that has allowed considerable improvements in recent decades is the prediction of contacts in a protein, since it provides fundamental information about its three-dimensional structure. In the 13th edition of the CASP (Critical Assessment of protein Structure Prediction), a notable progress has been evidenced for both problems with the use of deep learning algorithms. For the contact prediction category, the best methods in CASP13 achieved an average precision of 70%. In the present work, the performance of these methods is analyzed using a larger data set, with 483 proteins from four families according to the structural classification of the SCOP database (Structural Classification of Proteins). The selected methods were evaluated using the CASP metrics, and their results indicate an average contact prediction precision greater than 90%. SPOT-Contact was the method with the best overall performance, and one of the methods with the best performance for each SCOP class. The set of proteins used for the experiments and the implementations made for the analysis are publicly available.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Li ◽  
Jinbo Xu

AbstractInter-residue distance prediction by deep ResNet (convolutional residual neural network) has greatly advanced protein structure prediction. Currently the most successful structure prediction methods predict distance by discretizing it into dozens of bins. Here we study how well real-valued distance can be predicted and how useful it is for 3D structure modeling by comparing it with discrete-valued prediction based upon the same deep ResNet. Different from the recent methods that predict only a single real value for the distance of an atom pair, we predict both the mean and standard deviation of a distance and then employ a novel method to fold a protein by the predicted mean and deviation. Our findings include: 1) tested on the CASP13 FM (free-modeling) targets, our real-valued distance prediction obtains 81% precision on top L/5 long-range contact prediction, much better than the best CASP13 results (70%); 2) our real-valued prediction can predict correct folds for the same number of CASP13 FM targets as the best CASP13 group, despite generating only 20 decoys for each target; 3) our method greatly outperforms a very new real-valued prediction method DeepDist in both contact prediction and 3D structure modeling; and 4) when the same deep ResNet is used, our real-valued distance prediction has 1-6% higher contact and distance accuracy than our own discrete-valued prediction, but less accurate 3D structure models.


2016 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 937-943 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonina Andreeva

The Structural Classification of Proteins (SCOP) database has facilitated the development of many tools and algorithms and it has been successfully used in protein structure prediction and large-scale genome annotations. During the development of SCOP, numerous exceptions were found to topological rules, along with complex evolutionary scenarios and peculiarities in proteins including the ability to fold into alternative structures. This article reviews cases of structural variations observed for individual proteins and among groups of homologues, knowledge of which is essential for protein structure modelling.


Author(s):  
Arun G. Ingale

To predict the structure of protein from a primary amino acid sequence is computationally difficult. An investigation of the methods and algorithms used to predict protein structure and a thorough knowledge of the function and structure of proteins are critical for the advancement of biology and the life sciences as well as the development of better drugs, higher-yield crops, and even synthetic bio-fuels. To that end, this chapter sheds light on the methods used for protein structure prediction. This chapter covers the applications of modeled protein structures and unravels the relationship between pure sequence information and three-dimensional structure, which continues to be one of the greatest challenges in molecular biology. With this resource, it presents an all-encompassing examination of the problems, methods, tools, servers, databases, and applications of protein structure prediction, giving unique insight into the future applications of the modeled protein structures. In this chapter, current protein structure prediction methods are reviewed for a milieu on structure prediction, the prediction of structural fundamentals, tertiary structure prediction, and functional imminent. The basic ideas and advances of these directions are discussed in detail.


Author(s):  
Raghunath Satpathy

Proteins play a vital molecular role in all living organisms. Experimentally, it is difficult to predict the protein structure, however alternatively theoretical prediction method holds good for it. The 3D structure prediction of proteins is very much important in biology and this leads to the discovery of different useful drugs, enzymes, and currently this is considered as an important research domain. The prediction of proteins is related to identification of its tertiary structure. From the computational point of view, different models (protein representations) have been developed along with certain efficient optimization methods to predict the protein structure. The bio-inspired computation is used mostly for optimization process during solving protein structure. These algorithms now a days has received great interests and attention in the literature. This chapter aim basically for discussing the key features of recently developed five different types of bio-inspired computational algorithms, applied in protein structure prediction problems.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Geoffrey A S

This work seeks to combine the combined advantage of leveraging these emerging areas of Artificial Intelligence and quantum computing in applying it to solve the specific biological problem of protein structure prediction using Quantum Machine Learning algorithms. The CASP dataset from ProteinNet was downloaded which is a standardized data set for machine learning of protein structure. Its large and standardized dataset of PDB entries contains the coordinates of the backbone atoms, corresponding to the sequential chain of N, C_alpha, and C' atoms. This dataset was used to train a quantum-classical hybrid Keras deep neural network model to predict the structure of the proteins. To visually qualify the quality of the predicted versus the actual protein structure, protein contact maps were generated with the experimental and predicted protein structure data and qualified. Therefore this model is recommended for the use of protein structure prediction using AI leveraging the power of quantum computers. The code is provided in the following Github repository https://github.com/bengeof/Protein-structure-prediction-using-AI-and-quantum-computers.


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