Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity:bacterial antigens
Data(s) |
30/04/2010
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Resumo |
It has been postulated that immunogenicity results from the overall dissimilarity of pathogenic proteins versus the host proteome. We have sought to use this concept to discriminate between antigens and non-antigens of bacterial origin. Sets of 100 known antigenic and nonantigenic peptide sequences from bacteria 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 were unable to determine a threshold able to separate meaningfully antigen from non-antigen. Thus, antigens cannot be predicted from pathogen genomes based solely on their dissimilarity to the human genome. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
Ramakrishnan, Kamna and Flower, Darren R (2010). Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity:bacterial antigens. Bioinformation, 4 (10), pp. 445-7. |
Relação |
http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/16035/ |
Tipo |
Article PeerReviewed |