Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity II:viral and fungal antigens


Autoria(s): Ramakrishnan, Kamna; Flower, Darren R
Data(s)

24/06/2010

Resumo

Immunogenicity arises via many synergistic mechanisms, yet the overall dissimilarity of pathogenic proteins versus the host proteome has been proposed as a key arbiter. We have previously explored this concept in relation to Bacterial antigens; here we extend our analysis to antigens of viral and fungal origin. Sets of known viral and fungal antigenic and non-antigenic protein sequences were compared to human and mouse proteomes. Both antigenic and non-antigenic sequences lacked human or mouse homologues. Observed distributions were compared using the non-parametric Mann-Whitney test. The statistical null hypothesis was accepted, indicating that antigen and non-antigens did not differ significantly. Likewise, we could not determine a threshold able meaningfully to separate non-antigen from antigen. We conclude that viral and fungal antigens cannot be predicted from pathogen genomes based solely on their dissimilarity to mammalian genomes.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/16036/1/Discriminating_antigen_and_non_antigen_using_proteome_dissimilarity_II.pdf

Ramakrishnan, Kamna and Flower, Darren R (2010). Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity II:viral and fungal antigens. Bioinformation, 5 (1), pp. 35-38.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/16036/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed