Homology Induction: the use of machine learning to improve sequence similarity searches


Autoria(s): Karwath, Andreas; King, Ross Donald
Contribuinte(s)

Department of Computer Science

Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Group

Data(s)

24/08/2006

24/08/2006

23/04/2002

Resumo

Karwath, A. King, R. Homology induction: the use of machine learning to improve sequence similarity searches. BMC Bioinformatics. 23rd April 2002. 3:11 Additional File Describes the title organims species declaration in one string [http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/supplementary/1471- 2105-3-11-S1.doc] Sponsorship: Andreas Karwath and Ross D. King were supported by the EPSRC grant GR/L62849.

Background: The inference of homology between proteins is a key problem in molecular biology The current best approaches only identify ~50% of homologies (with a false positive rate set at 1/ 1000). Results: We present Homology Induction (HI), a new approach to inferring homology. HI uses machine learning to bootstrap from standard sequence similarity search methods. First a standard method is run, then HI learns rules which are true for sequences of high similarity to the target(assumed homologues) and not true for general sequences, these rules are then used to discriminate sequences in the twilight zone. To learn the rules HI describes the sequences in a novel way based on a bioinformatic knowledge base, and the machine learning method of inductive logic programming. To evaluate HI we used the PDB40D benchmark which lists sequences of known homology but low sequence similarity. We compared the HI methodoly with PSI-BLAST alone and found HI performed significantly better. In addition, Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve analysis showed that these improvements were robust for all reasonable error costs. The predictive homology rules learnt by HI by can be interpreted biologically to provide insight into conserved features of homologous protein families. Conclusions: HI is a new technique for the detection of remote protein homolgy ? a central bioinformatic problem. HI with PSI-BLAST is shown to outperform PSI-BLAST for all error costs. It is expect that similar improvements would be obtained using HI with any sequence similarity method.

Peer reviewed

Identificador

Karwath , A & King , R D 2002 , ' Homology Induction: the use of machine learning to improve sequence similarity searches ' BMC Bioinformatics , vol 3 , no. 11 . DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-3-11

1471-2105

PURE: 70889

PURE UUID: c2c1c7b4-7aac-4144-99ab-bc79b0910e76

dspace: 2160/258

http://hdl.handle.net/2160/258

http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-3-11

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

BMC Bioinformatics

Tipo

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontojournal/article

Direitos