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A Novel Sequence-Based Method for Phosphorylation Site Prediction with Feature Selection and Analysis

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Phosphorylation is one of the most important post-translational modifications, and the identification of protein phosphorylation sites is particularly important for studying disease diagnosis. However, experimental detection of phosphorylation sites is labor intensive. It would be beneficial if computational methods are available to provide an extra reference for the phosphorylation sites. Here we developed a novel sequence-based method for serine, threonine, and tyrosine phosphorylation site prediction. Nearest Neighbor algorithm was employed as the prediction engine. The peptides around the phosphorylation sites with a fixed length of thirteen amino acid residues were extracted via a sliding window along the protein chains concerned. Each of such peptides was coded into a vector with 6,072 features, derived from Amino Acid Index (AAIndex) database, for the classification/detection. Incremental Feature Selection, a feature selection algorithm based on the Maximum Relevancy Minimum Redundancy (mRMR) method was used to select a compact feature set for a further improvement of the classification performance. Three predictors were established for identifying the three types of phosphorylation sites, achieving the overall accuracies of 66.64%, 66.11%% and 66.69%, respectively. These rates were obtained by rigorous jackknife cross-validation tests.





Keywords: AAIndex; ABL; Bayesian Discriminant; Data mining; Feature Vector Construction; Machine learning approach; Nearest Neighbor algorithm; PHOSIDA; Phosphorylation; Predictor Construction; SVM; hydrophobicity; jackknife cross-validation tests; mRMR; protein kinases

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 January 2012

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  • Protein & Peptide Letters publishes short papers in all important aspects of protein and peptide research, including structural studies, recombinant expression, function, synthesis, enzymology, immunology, molecular modeling, drug design etc. Manuscripts must have a significant element of novelty, timeliness and urgency that merit rapid publication. Reports of crystallisation, and preliminary structure determinations of biologically important proteins are acceptable. Purely theoretical papers are also acceptable provided they provide new insight into the principles of protein/peptide structure and function.
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