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Mol Biosyst


Title:GPCR-2L: predicting G protein-coupled receptors and their types by hybridizing two different modes of pseudo amino acid compositions
Author(s):Xiao X; Wang P; Chou KC;
Address:"Computer Department, Jing-De-Zhen Ceramic Institute, Jing-De-Zhen 333403, China. xxiao@gordonlifescience.org"
Journal Title:Mol Biosyst
Year:2011
Volume:20101223
Issue:3
Page Number:911 - 919
DOI: 10.1039/c0mb00170h
ISSN/ISBN:1742-2051 (Electronic) 1742-2051 (Linking)
Abstract:"G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are among the most frequent targets of therapeutic drugs. With the avalanche of newly generated protein sequences in the post genomic age, to expedite the process of drug discovery, it is highly desirable to develop an automated method to rapidly identify GPCRs and their types. A new predictor was developed by hybridizing two different modes of pseudo-amino acid composition (PseAAC): the functional domain PseAAC and the low-frequency Fourier spectrum PseAAC. The new predictor is called GPCR-2L, where '2L' means that it is a two-layer predictor: the 1st layer prediction engine is to identify a query protein as GPCR or not; if it is, the prediction will be automatically continued to further identify it as belonging to one of the following six types: (1) rhodopsin-like (Class A), (2) secretin-like (Class B), (3) metabotropic glutamate/pheromone (Class C), (4) fungal pheromone (Class D), (5) cAMP receptor (Class E), or (6) frizzled/smoothened family (Class F). The overall success rate of GPCR-2L in identifying proteins as GPCRs or non-GPCRs is over 97.2%, while identifying GPCRs among their six types is over 97.8%. Such high success rates were derived by the rigorous jackknife cross-validation on a stringent benchmark dataset, in which none of the included proteins had >/=40% pairwise sequence identity to any other protein in a same subset. As a user-friendly web-server, GPCR-2L is freely accessible to the public at http://icpr.jci.edu.cn/, by which one can obtain the 2-level results in about 20 s for a query protein sequence of 500 amino acids. The longer the sequence is, the more time it may usually need. The high success rates reported here indicate that it is a quite effective approach to identify GPCRs and their types with the functional domain information and the low-frequency Fourier spectrum analysis. It is anticipated that GPCR-2L may become a useful tool for both basic research and drug development in the areas related to GPCRs"
Keywords:"Algorithms Amino Acids/*chemistry/*metabolism Databases, Protein Models, Biological Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/*chemistry/*metabolism;"
Notes:"MedlineXiao, Xuan Wang, Pu Chou, Kuo-Chen eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't England 2010/12/25 Mol Biosyst. 2011 Mar; 7(3):911-9. doi: 10.1039/c0mb00170h. Epub 2010 Dec 23"

 
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