Difference between revisions of "Sequence-based predictions HEXA"
(→General Information) |
(→Prediction of transmembrane alpha-helices and signal peptides) |
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(6 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
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=== Comparison of the different methods === |
=== Comparison of the different methods === |
||
− | To determine how |
+ | To determine how successful our secondary structure prediction with PSIPRED and Jpred were, we had to compare it with the secondary structure assignment of DSSP. First of all, DSSP assigns no beta-sheets whereas both prediction methods predict some beta-sheets. Therefore, the main comparison in this case refers to the alpha-helices. |
− | For PSIPRED the prediction of the alpha-helices was good. In |
+ | For PSIPRED the prediction of the alpha-helices was good. In most cases the alpha-helices of DSSP and PSIPRED correspond. There is only one helix which is predicted by PSIPRED which is not assigned as helix by DSSP. Furthermore there are three helices which are allocated as helices by DSSP which were not predicted by PSIPRED. The most of these helices which were presented only in one output are very small ones. |
− | For Jpred3 the prediction of the alpha-helices was sufficiently good. In the most cases it agrees with DSSP. There are only two helices which are predicted by Jpred and which are not |
+ | For Jpred3 the prediction of the alpha-helices was sufficiently good. In the most cases it agrees with DSSP. There are only two helices which are predicted by Jpred and which are not assigned by DSSP. In contrary, there are three small helices which are allocated to an alpha-helices by DSSP but are not predicted by Jpred. There is another special case where DSSP assigns two helices which are separated by a turn and Jpred predicts there only one big helix. |
− | All in all, the prediction of the helices is probably good because they correspond mostly with the |
+ | All in all, the prediction of the helices is probably good because they correspond mostly with the assignment of DSSP. The only negative aspect is, that both prediction methods predict a lot of sheets which were not assigned by DSSP at all. |
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | Back to [[http://i12r-studfilesrv.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/wiki/index.php/Tay-Sachs_Disease Tay-Sachs Disease]]<br> |
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== Prediction of disordered regions == |
== Prediction of disordered regions == |
||
− | Before we start with the analysis of the results of the different methods, we checked, if our protein has one or more |
+ | Before we start with the analysis of the results of the different methods, we checked, if our protein has one or more disordered regions. Therefore, we search our protein in the [[http://www.disprot.org/ DisProt database]] and did not find it, so our protein does not have any disordered regions. Another possibility to find out if the protein has disordered regions, is to check [[http://www.uniprot.org/ UniProt]], if there is an entry for [[http://www.disprot.org DisProt]]. |
=== Results === |
=== Results === |
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Line 144: | Line 146: | ||
=== Comparison of the different POODLE variants === |
=== Comparison of the different POODLE variants === |
||
− | POODLE-L |
+ | POODLE-L does not find any disordered regions. This is the result we expected, because our protein does not possess any disordered regions. |
− | Both POODLE-S variants found several short disordered regions, which is a false positive result. |
+ | Both POODLE-S variants found several short disordered regions, which is a false positive result. Interestingly, there seems to be more missing electrons in the electron density map, than residues with high B-factor value. |
POODLE-I found the same result as POODLE-S with high B-factor, which was expected, because POODLE-I combines POODLE-L and POODLE-S (high B-factor). |
POODLE-I found the same result as POODLE-S with high B-factor, which was expected, because POODLE-I combines POODLE-L and POODLE-S (high B-factor). |
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Line 152: | Line 154: | ||
Therefore, the predictions of short disordered regions are wrong results. Only the prediction of POODLE-L is correct. |
Therefore, the predictions of short disordered regions are wrong results. Only the prediction of POODLE-L is correct. |
||
− | In general, these predictions are used, if nothing is known about the protein. Therefore, normally we |
+ | In general, these predictions are used, if nothing is known about the protein. Therefore, normally we do not know, that the prediction is wrong. Because of that, we want to trust the result and we want to check if the disordered regions overlap with the functionally important residues, because it seems that disordered regions are functionally very important. |
We check this for POODLE-S with missing residues and POODLE-I, because POODLE-S with high B-factor values shows the same result as POODLE-I. |
We check this for POODLE-S with missing residues and POODLE-I, because POODLE-S with high B-factor values shows the same result as POODLE-I. |
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Line 261: | Line 263: | ||
<br><br> |
<br><br> |
||
POODLE-L, IUPred(long) and IUPred(structure) predict the disordered regions correct. |
POODLE-L, IUPred(long) and IUPred(structure) predict the disordered regions correct. |
||
− | The |
+ | The worst prediction result gave POODLE-S (B-factor) which predicts 47 residues as disordered, followed by POODLE-S (missing) (24 wrong predicted residues) and POODLE-I (23 wrong predicted residues).<br><br> |
+ | Back to [[http://i12r-studfilesrv.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/wiki/index.php/Tay-Sachs_Disease Tay-Sachs Disease]]<br> |
||
== Prediction of transmembrane alpha-helices and signal peptides == |
== Prediction of transmembrane alpha-helices and signal peptides == |
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Line 324: | Line 327: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| |
||
− | |colspan="3" | |
+ | |colspan="3" | TMHMM |
− | |colspan="3" | |
+ | |colspan="3" | Phobius |
− | |colspan="3" | |
+ | |colspan="3" | PolyPhobius |
− | |colspan="3" | |
+ | |colspan="3" | OCTOPUS |
− | |colspan="3" | |
+ | |colspan="3" | SPOCTOPUS |
|- |
|- |
||
|protein |
|protein |
||
Line 370: | Line 373: | ||
|colspan="3" | |
|colspan="3" | |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |colspan="9" | |
+ | |colspan="9" | |
|24 |
|24 |
||
|529 |
|529 |
||
Line 376: | Line 379: | ||
|colspan="3" | |
|colspan="3" | |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |rowspan="15" | |
+ | |rowspan="15" | BACR HALSA |
|1 |
|1 |
||
|22 |
|22 |
||
Line 599: | Line 602: | ||
|TM helix |
|TM helix |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |colspan="3" | |
+ | |colspan="3" | |
|238 |
|238 |
||
|262 |
|262 |
||
Line 613: | Line 616: | ||
|inside |
|inside |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |rowspan="3" | |
+ | |rowspan="3" | RET4 HUMAN |
|colspan="9" | |
|colspan="9" | |
||
|1 |
|1 |
||
Line 642: | Line 645: | ||
|outside |
|outside |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |rowspan="3" | |
+ | |rowspan="3" | INSL5 HUMAN |
|colspan="9" | |
|colspan="9" | |
||
|1 |
|1 |
||
Line 653: | Line 656: | ||
|32 |
|32 |
||
|TM helix |
|TM helix |
||
− | |colspan="3" | |
+ | |colspan="3" | |
|- |
|- |
||
|1 |
|1 |
||
Line 738: | Line 741: | ||
|outside |
|outside |
||
|- |
|- |
||
− | |rowspan="5" | |
+ | |rowspan="5" | A4 HUMAN |
|colspan="9" | |
|colspan="9" | |
||
|1 |
|1 |
||
Line 801: | Line 804: | ||
|} |
|} |
||
<br><br> |
<br><br> |
||
− | On the table above, you can see the summary of the results of the different methods which predict transmembrane helices.<br><br> |
+ | On the table above, you can see the summary of the results of the different methods which predict transmembrane helices. As you can see on this table, OCTOPUS often predicts a transmembrane helix, although all other methods do not predict one. Phobis, PolyPhobius and SPOCTOPUS show always very similar result, whereas TMHMM and OCTOPUS differ from these results.<br><br> |
+ | |||
+ | ==== Signal Peptide ==== |
||
+ | |||
+ | {| border="1" style="text-align:center; border-spacing:0;" |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |colspan="2" | Phobius |
||
+ | |colspan="2" | PolyPhobius |
||
+ | |colspan="2" | SPOCTOPUS |
||
+ | |colspan="1" | TargetP |
||
+ | |colspan="2" | SignalP |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |protein |
||
+ | |start position |
||
+ | |end position |
||
+ | |start position |
||
+ | |end position |
||
+ | |start position |
||
+ | |end position |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |start position |
||
+ | |end position |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |HEXA HUMAN |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |19 |
||
+ | |7 |
||
+ | |21 |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |BACR HALSA |
||
+ | |colspan="6" | no prediction available |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |38 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |RET4 HUMAN |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |6 |
||
+ | |19 |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |INSL5 HUMAN |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |6 |
||
+ | |23 |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |LAMP1 HUMAN |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |28 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |28 |
||
+ | |12 |
||
+ | |29 |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |28 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |A4 HUMAN |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |5 |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |15 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |} |
||
+ | <br> |
||
+ | In the last table there is a list with the results of the prediction of the signal peptides created by different methods. As we can see on the first look, all methods predict always a signal peptide, although the stop position of this signal differ. Phobius, PolyPhobius and SPOCTOPUS failed by predicting the signal peptide from BACR_HALSA. Furthermore, TargetP do not predict the position of the signal peptide, instead it only predicts the location of the protein.<br><br> |
||
+ | |||
+ | === Comparison of the different methods === |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | We decided to split the comparison of the methods, because it is unfair to directly compare a method which can not predict a signal peptide and a method which predicts signal peptides. Therefore, we split the comparison in one comparison for transmembrane helices, one for signal peptides and one for the combination of both. |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | * Comparison of transmembrane helix prediction |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | Here we compared TMHMM, OCTOPUS and the transmembrane predictions of SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius. In this comparison we skipped the first residues which are signal peptides, because all only-transmembrane prediction methods predicted these region as transmembrane helices, which is wrong. |
||
+ | <br> |
||
+ | For this comparison we counted the wrong predicted transmembrane residues, the wrong predicted outside located residues and the wrong predicted inside residues. |
||
+ | |||
+ | {| border="1" style="text-align:center; border-spacing:0;" |
||
+ | |rowspan="2" | |
||
+ | |rowspan="2" | |
||
+ | |colspan="5" | methods |
||
+ | |rowspan="1" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |TMHMM |
||
+ | |Phobius |
||
+ | |PolyPhobius |
||
+ | |OCTOPUS |
||
+ | |SPOCTOPUS |
||
+ | |Transmembrane protein |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | HEXA_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong transmembrane |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | no |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong outside |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong insde |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong sum |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |%wrong predicted |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | BACR_HALSA |
||
+ | |#wrong transmembrane |
||
+ | |24 |
||
+ | |20 |
||
+ | |12 |
||
+ | |16 |
||
+ | |11 |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | yes (7 transmembrane helices) |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong outside |
||
+ | |46 |
||
+ | |5 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |4 |
||
+ | |6 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong inside |
||
+ | |4 |
||
+ | |4 |
||
+ | |2 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong sum |
||
+ | |74 |
||
+ | |29 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |20 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |%wrong predicted |
||
+ | |29% |
||
+ | |11% |
||
+ | |6% |
||
+ | |8% |
||
+ | |6% |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | RET4_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong transmembrane |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |5 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | no |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong outside |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong inside |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong sum |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |5 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |%wrong predicted |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |2% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | INSL5_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong transmembrane |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |10 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | no |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong outside |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong inside |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong sum |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |10 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |%wrong predicted |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |8% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | LAMP1_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong transmembrane |
||
+ | |5 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |4 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | yes (single-spanning) |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong outside |
||
+ | |2 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong inside |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong sum |
||
+ | |7 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |4 |
||
+ | |5 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |%wrong predicted |
||
+ | |2% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |1% |
||
+ | |1% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | A4_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong transmembrane |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |rowspan="5" | yes (single-spanning) |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong outside |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |2 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong inside |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong sum |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |2 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |%wrong predicted |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |0% |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | Average number of wrong predicted residues |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |13.6 |
||
+ | |5.5 |
||
+ | |3.6 |
||
+ | |7 |
||
+ | |3.8 |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |} |
||
+ | |||
+ | TMHMM is the worst prediction method. This can also be seen on the example of BACR_HALSA, because TMHMM is the only prediction method, which do not recognize the 7 transmembrane helices. |
||
+ | SPOCTOPUS and PolyPhobius are the best prediction methods.<br><br> |
||
+ | In general, the prediction of transmembrane helices works quite good and almost all predictions are very close to the real protein. |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | * Comparison of signal peptide prediction |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | Now we compared TargetP and SignalP which only predict signal peptides. Furthermore, we compared SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius. |
||
+ | TargetP does not predict the start and end position of the signal peptide, instead it predicts only the location of the protein. |
||
+ | |||
+ | {| border="1" style="text-align:center; border-spacing:0;" |
||
+ | |rowspan="2" | |
||
+ | |rowspan="2" | |
||
+ | |colspan="6" | methods |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |real position |
||
+ | |Phobius |
||
+ | |PolyPhobius |
||
+ | |SPOCTOPUS |
||
+ | |TargetP |
||
+ | |SignalP |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | HEXA_HUMAN |
||
+ | |stop position |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |19 |
||
+ | |21 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong residues |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | BACR_HALSA |
||
+ | |stop position |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |no consensus prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |membrane |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |not available |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |non-signal peptide |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | RET4_HUMAN |
||
+ | |stop position |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |19 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | INSL5_HUMAN |
||
+ | |stop position |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |22 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong residues |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | LAMP1_HUMAN |
||
+ | |stop position |
||
+ | |28 |
||
+ | |28 |
||
+ | |28 |
||
+ | |29 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |28 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong residues |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |transmembrane helix |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | A4_HUMAN |
||
+ | |stop position |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |18 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong residues |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |transmembrane helix |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |secretory pathway |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="8" | Average number of wrong prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="2" | |
||
+ | |sum of wrong predicted residues |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |2 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#right predicted locations / #predicted locations |
||
+ | | |
||
+ | |3/5 |
||
+ | |3/5 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |3/5 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |} |
||
+ | |||
+ | SPOCTOPUS and SignalP do not predict the location of the protein, they only predict the start and stop position of the signal peptide. Furthermore, SignalP predicts if it is a signal peptide or not. |
||
+ | In contrast, TargetP only predicts the location of the protein, not the start and stop position of the signal peptide. Only Phobius and PolyPhobius predict both.<br> |
||
+ | Therefore, it is difficult to compare the different methods. First of all, Phobius and PolyPhobius have more power than the other prediction methods, because they predict both. In average they predict the location and also the position as good as the other prediction methods. None of the methods could predict the transmembrane proteins, all methods predict them as proteins of the secretory pathway. Therefore, it is useful to use Phobius or PolyPhobius, because they predict more than the other methods. Furthermore, both methods can also predict transmembrane helices. |
||
+ | The results of Phobius were a little bit better than the results of PolyPhobius.<br> |
||
+ | We also wanted to mention, that SignalP gave you the possibility to choose between the prediction for eukaryotes, gram-positive bacteria and gram-negative bacteria. In our analyse we also analysed BACR_HALSA, which is an archaea protein. We tested all three prediction methods for this protein and all three methods failed. BACR_HALSA do not possess a signal peptide, but every method predicts one. Only the eukaryotic prediction method recognized a signal anchor for BACR_HALSA, whereas the other two methods could not give a prediction of the location.<br><br> |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | * Comparison of the combined methods |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | The last issue, we wanted to compare, was the combined methods. SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius can predict transmembrane helices as well as signal peptides. Therefore we combined our two further comparisons. |
||
+ | |||
+ | {| border="1" style="text-align:center; border-spacing:0;" |
||
+ | |rowspan="2" | |
||
+ | |rowspan="2" | |
||
+ | |colspan="3" | methods |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |Phobius |
||
+ | |PolyPhobius |
||
+ | |SPOCTOPUS |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | HEXA_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (TM) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (SP) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |2 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |right |
||
+ | |right |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="5" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | BACR_HALSA |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (TM) |
||
+ | |29 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |17 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (SP) |
||
+ | |n.a. |
||
+ | |n.a. |
||
+ | |n.a. |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |n.a |
||
+ | |n.a |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="5" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | RET4_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (TM) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (SP) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |right |
||
+ | |right |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="5" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | INSL5_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (TM) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (SP) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |right |
||
+ | |right |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="5" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | LAMP1_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (TM) |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |4 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (SP) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |wrong |
||
+ | |wrong |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="5" | |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | A4_HUMAN |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (TM) |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |0 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#wrong predicted residues (SP) |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |3 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |location |
||
+ | |wrong |
||
+ | |wrong |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | !colspan="5" | Average |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |rowspan="3" | |
||
+ | |avg(#wrong predicted residues (TM)) |
||
+ | |5.3 |
||
+ | |3.5 |
||
+ | |3.3 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |avg(#wrong predicted residues (SP)) |
||
+ | |0.1 |
||
+ | |0.6 |
||
+ | |1 |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |#location (right predicted) / #location(predicted) |
||
+ | |3/5 |
||
+ | |3/5 |
||
+ | |no prediction |
||
+ | |- |
||
+ | |} |
||
+ | |||
+ | In general, PolyPhobius gave the best results. Although it predicts the signal peptide stop position a little bit worse than Phobius, the transmembrane prediction is significant better than by the prediction of Phobius. The predictions of SPOCTOPUS are also good, but sadly SPOCTOPUS does not predict the location of the protein.<br> |
||
+ | Therefore, it seems a good choice to use PolyPhobius, which is in average the best method for transmembrane and signal peptide prediction.<br><br> |
||
+ | <br><br> |
||
+ | Back to [[http://i12r-studfilesrv.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/wiki/index.php/Tay-Sachs_Disease Tay-Sachs Disease]]<br> |
||
==== Signal Peptide ==== |
==== Signal Peptide ==== |
||
Line 1,508: | Line 2,216: | ||
== Prediction of GO terms == |
== Prediction of GO terms == |
||
− | Before we start with |
+ | Before we start with our analysis, we decided to check the GO annotations for the six sequences, which can be found [[http://i12r-studfilesrv.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/wiki/index.php/GO_annotation_of_the_proteins here]]: |
A detailed list of the GO annotation terms of each protein can be found [[http://i12r-studfilesrv.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/wiki/index.php/Go_annotations_here here]]. |
A detailed list of the GO annotation terms of each protein can be found [[http://i12r-studfilesrv.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/wiki/index.php/Go_annotations_here here]]. |
||
Line 1,746: | Line 2,454: | ||
|} |
|} |
||
− | As you can see in the |
+ | As you can see in the table above, each method only predicts a small subgroup of the real annotated GO terms. In general, GOPET seems to be the best method, because GOPET is the only method which predicts the GO Terms and in sum, it has mostly the best ratio by prediction true positive. Furthermore, it also predicts more GO terms than the other methods.<br> |
It was not possible to calculate the ratio between true positives and annotated GO terms for ProtFun, because this method has defined terms and only predicts the probability, that the protein belongs to these terms. <br> |
It was not possible to calculate the ratio between true positives and annotated GO terms for ProtFun, because this method has defined terms and only predicts the probability, that the protein belongs to these terms. <br> |
||
In general, you can say GO term prediction does not work very well and the prediction results only give hints of the function and localization of the protein.<br><br> |
In general, you can say GO term prediction does not work very well and the prediction results only give hints of the function and localization of the protein.<br><br> |
||
+ | Back to [[http://i12r-studfilesrv.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/wiki/index.php/Tay-Sachs_Disease Tay-Sachs Disease]]<br> |
Latest revision as of 22:27, 30 August 2011
Contents
General Information
Secondary Structure Prediction
To analyse the secondary structure of our protein we used different methods. In our analysis we used PSIPRED, Jpred3 and DSSP. In the analysis section of this page we want to compare these three methods to see if the methods give similar results or if they differ extremely.
[Here] you can find some general information about these methods.
Back to [Tay-Sachs Disease]
Prediction of disordered regions
After analysing the secondary structure, we also want to have a look at disordered regions in this protein. Therefore, we used different methods. We used DISOPRED, POODLE in several variations, IUPred and Meta-Disorder. As before, with the the secondary structure prediction methods we want to compare the different methods and variants, if the predictions are similar. Therefore, we also want to decided which methods seems to be the best one for our purpose.
To get more insight into the methods and the theory behind them we also offer you an [general information page].
Back to [Tay-Sachs Disease]
Prediction of transmembrane helices and signal peptides
The third big analysis section is the prediction of transmembrane helices and signal peptides. We merged the prediction of transmembrane helices and signal peptides in one section, because there are several prediction methods which can predict both and therefore we looked at both predictions in this section.
Therefore we used several methods, some which only predict transmembrane helices, some which only predict signal peptides and some combined methods.
To have a closer look at the different methods we again provide an [information page.]
Back to [Tay-Sachs Disease]
Prediction of GO Terms
The last section is about the analysis of GO Terms. As before, we used several methods and compared them to each other.
Again we also provide an [general information page] about the GO Term methods, we used in our analysis.
Back to [Tay-Sachs Disease]
Secondary Structure prediction
Results
The detailed output of the different prediction methods can be found [here]
Here we only present a short summary of the output of the different methods.
- Predicted Helices
method | #helices |
PSIPRED | 14 |
Jpred3 | 14 |
DSSP | 16 |
- Predicted Beta-Sheets
method | #sheets |
PSIPRED | 15 |
Jpred3 | 15 |
DSSP | 0 |
Comparison of the different methods
To determine how successful our secondary structure prediction with PSIPRED and Jpred were, we had to compare it with the secondary structure assignment of DSSP. First of all, DSSP assigns no beta-sheets whereas both prediction methods predict some beta-sheets. Therefore, the main comparison in this case refers to the alpha-helices.
For PSIPRED the prediction of the alpha-helices was good. In most cases the alpha-helices of DSSP and PSIPRED correspond. There is only one helix which is predicted by PSIPRED which is not assigned as helix by DSSP. Furthermore there are three helices which are allocated as helices by DSSP which were not predicted by PSIPRED. The most of these helices which were presented only in one output are very small ones.
For Jpred3 the prediction of the alpha-helices was sufficiently good. In the most cases it agrees with DSSP. There are only two helices which are predicted by Jpred and which are not assigned by DSSP. In contrary, there are three small helices which are allocated to an alpha-helices by DSSP but are not predicted by Jpred. There is another special case where DSSP assigns two helices which are separated by a turn and Jpred predicts there only one big helix.
All in all, the prediction of the helices is probably good because they correspond mostly with the assignment of DSSP. The only negative aspect is, that both prediction methods predict a lot of sheets which were not assigned by DSSP at all.
Back to [Tay-Sachs Disease]
Prediction of disordered regions
Before we start with the analysis of the results of the different methods, we checked, if our protein has one or more disordered regions. Therefore, we search our protein in the [DisProt database] and did not find it, so our protein does not have any disordered regions. Another possibility to find out if the protein has disordered regions, is to check [UniProt], if there is an entry for [DisProt].
Results
The detailed results of the different methods can be found [here]
In this section, we only want to give a summary of the output of the different methods.
method | #disordered regions in the protein | #disordered regions on the brink |
Disopred | 0 | 2 |
POODLE-I | 3 | 2 |
POODLE-L | 0 | 0 |
POODLE-S (B-factors) | 3 | 2 |
POODLE-S (missing residues) | 4 | 2 |
IUPred (short) | 0 | 2 |
IUPred (long) | 0 | 0 |
IUPred (structural information) | 0 | 0 |
Meta-Disorder | 0 | 0 |
Comparison of the different POODLE variants
POODLE-L does not find any disordered regions. This is the result we expected, because our protein does not possess any disordered regions.
Both POODLE-S variants found several short disordered regions, which is a false positive result. Interestingly, there seems to be more missing electrons in the electron density map, than residues with high B-factor value.
POODLE-I found the same result as POODLE-S with high B-factor, which was expected, because POODLE-I combines POODLE-L and POODLE-S (high B-factor).
Therefore, the predictions of short disordered regions are wrong results. Only the prediction of POODLE-L is correct.
In general, these predictions are used, if nothing is known about the protein. Therefore, normally we do not know, that the prediction is wrong. Because of that, we want to trust the result and we want to check if the disordered regions overlap with the functionally important residues, because it seems that disordered regions are functionally very important. We check this for POODLE-S with missing residues and POODLE-I, because POODLE-S with high B-factor values shows the same result as POODLE-I.
functional residues | disordered | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
residue position | amino acid | function | POODLE-S (missing) | POODLE-I |
323 | E | active site | ordered | ordered |
115 | N | Glycolysation | ordered | ordered |
157 | N | Glycolysation | ordered | ordered |
259 | N | Glycolysation | ordered | ordered |
58 (connected with 104) | C | Disulfide bond | disordered | ordered |
104 (connected with 58) | C | Disulfide bond | disordered | ordered |
277 (connected with 328) | C | Disulfide bond | ordered | ordered |
328 (connected with 277) | C | Disulfide bond | ordered | ordered |
505 (connected with 522) | C | Disulfide bond | ordered | ordered |
522 (connected with 505) | C | Disulfide bond | ordered | ordered |
As you can see in the table above, only one disulfide bond is located in a disordered region, all other functionally important residues are located in ordered regions. This is a further good hint, that the predictions are wrong.
Comparison of the different methods
We decided to compare the results of the different methods. Therefore, we count how many residues are predicted as disordered, which is wrong in our case.
methods | |||||||||
Disopred | POODLE-I | POODLE-L | POODLE-S (missing) | POODLE-S (B-factor) | IUPred (short) | IUPred (long) | IUPred (structure) | Meta-Disorder | |
#wrong predicted residues | 5 | 23 | 0 | 47 | 24 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
POODLE-L, IUPred(long) and IUPred(structure) predict the disordered regions correct.
The worst prediction result gave POODLE-S (B-factor) which predicts 47 residues as disordered, followed by POODLE-S (missing) (24 wrong predicted residues) and POODLE-I (23 wrong predicted residues).
Back to [Tay-Sachs Disease]
Prediction of transmembrane alpha-helices and signal peptides
Because most of the proteins we used in this practical are not membrane proteins, we got five additional proteins for the transmembrane and signal peptide analyses.
Additional proteins:
name | organism | location | transmembrane protein | sequence |
BACR_HALSA | Halobacterium salinarium (Archaea) | Cell membrane | Multi-pass membrane protein | [P02945.fasta] |
RET4_HUMAN | Human (Homo sapiens) | extracellular space | No | [P02753.fasta] |
INSL5_HUMAN | Human (Homo sapiens) | extracellular region | No | [Q9Y5Q6.fasta] |
LAMP1_HUMAN | Human (Homo sapiens) | Cell membrane | Single-pass membrane protein | [P11279.fasta] |
A4_HUMAN | Human (Homo sapiens) | Cell membrane | Single-pass membrane protein | [P05067.fasta] |
The detailed output for the different organism and the different prediction methods can be found here:
- [HEXA_HUMAN]
- [BACR_HALSA]
- [RET4_HUMAN]
- [INSL5_HUMAN]
- [LAMP1_HUMAN]
- [A4_HUMAN]
Results
Transmembrane Helices
TMHMM | Phobius | PolyPhobius | OCTOPUS | SPOCTOPUS | |||||||||||
protein | start position | end position | location | start position | end position | location | start position | end position | location | start position | end position | location | start position | end position | location |
HEXA HUMAN | 1 | 529 | outside | 23 | 529 | outside | 20 | 520 | outside | 1 | 2 | inside | 22 | 529 | outside |
3 | 23 | TM helix | |||||||||||||
24 | 529 | outside | |||||||||||||
BACR HALSA | 1 | 22 | outside | 1 | 22 | outside | 1 | 22 | outside | ||||||
23 | 42 | TM Helix | 23 | 42 | TM helix | 22 | 43 | TM helix | 23 | 43 | TM helix | 23 | 43 | TM helix | |
43 | 54 | inside | 43 | 53 | inside | 44 | 54 | inside | 44 | 54 | inside | 44 | 54 | inside | |
55 | 77 | TM Helix | 54 | 76 | TM helix | 55 | 77 | TM helix | 55 | 75 | TM helix | 55 | 75 | TM helix | |
78 | 91 | outside | 77 | 95 | outside | 78 | 94 | outside | 76 | 95 | outside | 76 | 95 | outside | |
92 | 114 | TM Helix | 96 | 114 | TM helix | 95 | 114 | TM helix | 96 | 116 | TM helix | 96 | 116 | TM helix | |
115 | 120 | inside | 115 | 120 | inside | 115 | 120 | inside | 117 | 121 | inside | 117 | 120 | inside | |
121 | 143 | TM Helix | 121 | 142 | TM helix | 121 | 141 | TM helix | 122 | 142 | TM helix | 121 | 141 | TM helix | |
144 | 147 | outside | 143 | 147 | outside | 142 | 147 | outside | 143 | 147 | outside | 142 | 147 | outside | |
148 | 170 | TM Helix | 148 | 169 | TM helix | 148 | 166 | TM helix | 148 | 168 | TM helix | 148 | 168 | TM helix | |
171 | 189 | inside | 170 | 189 | inside | 167 | 186 | inside | 169 | 185 | inside | 169 | 185 | inside | |
190 | 212 | TM Helix | 190 | 212 | TM helix | 187 | 205 | TM helix | 186 | 206 | TM helix | 186 | 206 | TM helix | |
213 | 262 | outside | 213 | 217 | outside | 206 | 215 | outside | 207 | 216 | outside | 207 | 216 | outside | |
218 | 237 | TM helix | 216 | 237 | TM helix | 217 | 237 | TM helix | 217 | 237 | TM helix | ||||
238 | 262 | inside | 238 | 262 | inside | 238 | 262 | inside | 238 | 262 | inside | ||||
RET4 HUMAN | 1 | 1 | inside | ||||||||||||
2 | 23 | TM helix | |||||||||||||
1 | 201 | outside | 19 | 201 | outside | 19 | 201 | outside | 24 | 201 | outside | 20 | 201 | outside | |
INSL5 HUMAN | 1 | 1 | inside | ||||||||||||
2 | 32 | TM helix | |||||||||||||
1 | 135 | outside | 23 | 135 | outside | 23 | 135 | outside | 33 | 135 | outside | 24 | 135 | outside | |
LAMP1 HUMAN | 1 | 10 | inside | 1 | 10 | inside | |||||||||
11 | 33 | TM Helix | 11 | 31 | TM helix | ||||||||||
34 | 383 | outside | 29 | 381 | outside | 29 | 381 | outside | 32 | 383 | outside | 30 | 383 | outside | |
384 | 406 | TM Helix | 382 | 405 | TM helix | 382 | 405 | TM helix | 384 | 404 | TM helix | 384 | 404 | TM helix | |
407 | 417 | inside | 406 | 417 | outside | 406 | 417 | outside | 405 | 417 | outside | 405 | 417 | outside | |
A4 HUMAN | 1 | 5 | outside | ||||||||||||
6 | 11 | R | |||||||||||||
1 | 700 | outside | 18 | 700 | outside | 18 | 700 | outside | 12 | 701 | outside | 19 | 701 | outside | |
701 | 723 | TM Helix | 701 | 723 | TM helix | 701 | 723 | TM helix | 702 | 722 | TM helix | 702 | 722 | TM helix | |
724 | 770 | inside | 724 | 770 | inside | 724 | 770 | inside | 723 | 770 | inside | 723 | 770 | inside |
On the table above, you can see the summary of the results of the different methods which predict transmembrane helices. As you can see on this table, OCTOPUS often predicts a transmembrane helix, although all other methods do not predict one. Phobis, PolyPhobius and SPOCTOPUS show always very similar result, whereas TMHMM and OCTOPUS differ from these results.
Signal Peptide
Phobius | PolyPhobius | SPOCTOPUS | TargetP | SignalP | |||||
protein | start position | end position | start position | end position | start position | end position | location | start position | end position |
HEXA HUMAN | 1 | 22 | 1 | 19 | 7 | 21 | secretory pathway | 1 | 22 |
BACR HALSA | no prediction available | secretory pathway | 1 | 38 | |||||
RET4 HUMAN | 1 | 18 | 1 | 18 | 6 | 19 | secretory pathway | 1 | 18 |
INSL5 HUMAN | 1 | 22 | 1 | 22 | 6 | 23 | secretory pathway | 1 | 22 |
LAMP1 HUMAN | 1 | 28 | 1 | 28 | 12 | 29 | secretory pathway | 1 | 28 |
A4 HUMAN | 1 | 17 | 1 | 17 | 5 | 18 | secretory pathway | 1 | 15 |
In the last table there is a list with the results of the prediction of the signal peptides created by different methods. As we can see on the first look, all methods predict always a signal peptide, although the stop position of this signal differ. Phobius, PolyPhobius and SPOCTOPUS failed by predicting the signal peptide from BACR_HALSA. Furthermore, TargetP do not predict the position of the signal peptide, instead it only predicts the location of the protein.
Comparison of the different methods
We decided to split the comparison of the methods, because it is unfair to directly compare a method which can not predict a signal peptide and a method which predicts signal peptides. Therefore, we split the comparison in one comparison for transmembrane helices, one for signal peptides and one for the combination of both.
- Comparison of transmembrane helix prediction
Here we compared TMHMM, OCTOPUS and the transmembrane predictions of SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius. In this comparison we skipped the first residues which are signal peptides, because all only-transmembrane prediction methods predicted these region as transmembrane helices, which is wrong.
For this comparison we counted the wrong predicted transmembrane residues, the wrong predicted outside located residues and the wrong predicted inside residues.
methods | |||||||
TMHMM | Phobius | PolyPhobius | OCTOPUS | SPOCTOPUS | Transmembrane protein | ||
HEXA_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | no |
#wrong outside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong insde | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | ||
BACR_HALSA | #wrong transmembrane | 24 | 20 | 12 | 16 | 11 | yes (7 transmembrane helices) |
#wrong outside | 46 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 6 | ||
#wrong inside | 4 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 74 | 29 | 17 | 20 | 17 | ||
%wrong predicted | 29% | 11% | 6% | 8% | 6% | ||
RET4_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | no |
#wrong outside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 2% | 0% | ||
INSL5_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 0 | no |
#wrong outside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 0 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 8% | 0% | ||
LAMP1_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 5 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 1 | yes (single-spanning) |
#wrong outside | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
#wrong sum | 7 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 3 | ||
%wrong predicted | 2% | 0% | 1% | 1% | 0% | ||
A4_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | yes (single-spanning) |
#wrong outside | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
#wrong sum | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | ||
Average number of wrong predicted residues | |||||||
13.6 | 5.5 | 3.6 | 7 | 3.8 |
TMHMM is the worst prediction method. This can also be seen on the example of BACR_HALSA, because TMHMM is the only prediction method, which do not recognize the 7 transmembrane helices.
SPOCTOPUS and PolyPhobius are the best prediction methods.
In general, the prediction of transmembrane helices works quite good and almost all predictions are very close to the real protein.
- Comparison of signal peptide prediction
Now we compared TargetP and SignalP which only predict signal peptides. Furthermore, we compared SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius.
TargetP does not predict the start and end position of the signal peptide, instead it predicts only the location of the protein.
methods | |||||||
real position | Phobius | PolyPhobius | SPOCTOPUS | TargetP | SignalP | ||
HEXA_HUMAN | stop position | 22 | 22 | 19 | 21 | no prediction | 22 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 3 | 3 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
BACR_HALSA | stop position | not available | no prediction | no prediction | no prediction | no prediction | no consensus prediction |
#wrong predicted | not available | not available | not available | not available | no prediction | not available | |
location | membrane | not available | not available | not available | secretory pathway | non-signal peptide | |
RET4_HUMAN | stop position | 18 | 18 | 18 | 19 | no prediction | 18 |
#wrong predicted | 0 | 0 | 1 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
INSL5_HUMAN | stop position | 22 | 22 | 22 | 22 | no prediction | 22 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 0 | 0 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
LAMP1_HUMAN | stop position | 28 | 28 | 28 | 29 | no prediction | 28 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 0 | 1 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | transmembrane helix | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
A4_HUMAN | stop position | 17 | 17 | 17 | 18 | no prediction | 17 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 0 | 1 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | transmembrane helix | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | |
Average number of wrong prediction | |||||||
sum of wrong predicted residues | 0 | 3 | 2 | no prediction | 0 | ||
#right predicted locations / #predicted locations | 3/5 | 3/5 | no prediction | 3/5 | no prediction |
SPOCTOPUS and SignalP do not predict the location of the protein, they only predict the start and stop position of the signal peptide. Furthermore, SignalP predicts if it is a signal peptide or not.
In contrast, TargetP only predicts the location of the protein, not the start and stop position of the signal peptide. Only Phobius and PolyPhobius predict both.
Therefore, it is difficult to compare the different methods. First of all, Phobius and PolyPhobius have more power than the other prediction methods, because they predict both. In average they predict the location and also the position as good as the other prediction methods. None of the methods could predict the transmembrane proteins, all methods predict them as proteins of the secretory pathway. Therefore, it is useful to use Phobius or PolyPhobius, because they predict more than the other methods. Furthermore, both methods can also predict transmembrane helices.
The results of Phobius were a little bit better than the results of PolyPhobius.
We also wanted to mention, that SignalP gave you the possibility to choose between the prediction for eukaryotes, gram-positive bacteria and gram-negative bacteria. In our analyse we also analysed BACR_HALSA, which is an archaea protein. We tested all three prediction methods for this protein and all three methods failed. BACR_HALSA do not possess a signal peptide, but every method predicts one. Only the eukaryotic prediction method recognized a signal anchor for BACR_HALSA, whereas the other two methods could not give a prediction of the location.
- Comparison of the combined methods
The last issue, we wanted to compare, was the combined methods. SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius can predict transmembrane helices as well as signal peptides. Therefore we combined our two further comparisons.
methods | ||||
Phobius | PolyPhobius | SPOCTOPUS | ||
HEXA_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 3 | 2 | |
location | right | right | no prediction | |
BACR_HALSA | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 29 | 17 | 17 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
location | n.a | n.a | no prediction | |
RET4_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
location | right | right | no prediction | |
INSL5_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 0 | 1 | |
location | right | right | no prediction | |
LAMP1_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 3 | 4 | 3 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
location | wrong | wrong | no prediction | |
A4_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 1 | 1 | 3 | |
location | wrong | wrong | no prediction | |
Average | ||||
avg(#wrong predicted residues (TM)) | 5.3 | 3.5 | 3.3 | |
avg(#wrong predicted residues (SP)) | 0.1 | 0.6 | 1 | |
#location (right predicted) / #location(predicted) | 3/5 | 3/5 | no prediction |
In general, PolyPhobius gave the best results. Although it predicts the signal peptide stop position a little bit worse than Phobius, the transmembrane prediction is significant better than by the prediction of Phobius. The predictions of SPOCTOPUS are also good, but sadly SPOCTOPUS does not predict the location of the protein.
Therefore, it seems a good choice to use PolyPhobius, which is in average the best method for transmembrane and signal peptide prediction.
Back to [Tay-Sachs Disease]
Signal Peptide
Phobius | PolyPhobius | SPOCTOPUS | TargetP | SignalP | |||||
protein | start position | end position | start position | end position | start position | end position | location | start position | end position |
HEXA HUMAN | 1 | 22 | 1 | 19 | 7 | 21 | secretory pathway | 1 | 22 |
BACR HALSA | no prediction available | secretory pathway | 1 | 38 | |||||
RET4 HUMAN | 1 | 18 | 1 | 18 | 6 | 19 | secretory pathway | 1 | 18 |
INSL5 HUMAN | 1 | 22 | 1 | 22 | 6 | 23 | secretory pathway | 1 | 22 |
LAMP1 HUMAN | 1 | 28 | 1 | 28 | 12 | 29 | secretory pathway | 1 | 28 |
A4 HUMAN | 1 | 17 | 1 | 17 | 5 | 18 | secretory pathway | 1 | 15 |
In the last table there is a list with the results of the prediction of the signal peptides created by different methods.
Comparison of the different methods
We decided to split the comparison of the methods, because it is unfair to directly compare a method which can not predict a signal peptide and a method which predicts signal peptides. Therefore, we split the comparison in one comparison for transmembrane helices, one for signal peptides and one for the combination of both.
- Comparison of transmembrane helix prediction
Here we compared TMHMM, OCTOPUS and the transmembrane predictions of SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius. In this comparison we skipped the first residues which are signal peptides, because all only-transmembrane prediction methods predicted these region as transmembrane helices, which is wrong.
For this comparison we counted the wrong predicted transmembrane residues, the wrong predicted outside located residues and the wrong predicted inside residues.
methods | |||||||
TMHMM | Phobius | PolyPhobius | OCTOPUS | SPOCTOPUS | Transmembrane protein | ||
HEXA_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | no |
#wrong outside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong insde | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | ||
BACR_HALSA | #wrong transmembrane | 24 | 20 | 12 | 16 | 11 | yes (7 transmembrane helices) |
#wrong outside | 46 | 5 | 3 | 4 | 6 | ||
#wrong inside | 4 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 74 | 29 | 17 | 20 | 17 | ||
%wrong predicted | 29% | 11% | 6% | 8% | 6% | ||
RET4_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | no |
#wrong outside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 0 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 2% | 0% | ||
INSL5_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 0 | no |
#wrong outside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
#wrong sum | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 | 0 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 8% | 0% | ||
LAMP1_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 5 | 3 | 4 | 3 | 1 | yes (single-spanning) |
#wrong outside | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
#wrong sum | 7 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 3 | ||
%wrong predicted | 2% | 0% | 1% | 1% | 0% | ||
A4_HUMAN | #wrong transmembrane | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | yes (single-spanning) |
#wrong outside | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||
#wrong inside | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
#wrong sum | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | ||
%wrong predicted | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | ||
Average number of wrong predicted residues | |||||||
13.6 | 5.5 | 3.6 | 7 | 3.8 |
TMHMM is the baddest prediction method. This can also be seen at the example of BACR_HALSA, because TMHMM is the only prediction method, which do not recognize the 7 transmembrane helices.
SPOCTOPUS and PolyPhobius are the best prediction methods.
In general the prediction of transmembrane helices works quite good and almost all predictions are very close to the real protein.
- Comparison of signal peptide prediction
Now we compared TargetP and SignalP which can only predict signal peptides. Furthermore we compared SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius.
TargetP does not predict the start and end position of the signal peptide, instead it predicts only the location of the protein.
methods | |||||||
real position | Phobius | PolyPhobius | SPOCTOPUS | TargetP | SignalP | ||
HEXA_HUMAN | stop position | 22 | 22 | 19 | 21 | no prediction | 22 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 3 | 3 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
BACR_HALSA | stop position | not available | no prediction | no prediction | no prediction | no prediction | no consensus prediction |
#wrong predicted | not available | not available | not available | not available | no prediction | not available | |
location | membrane | not available | not available | not available | secretory pathway | non-signal peptide | |
RET4_HUMAN | stop position | 18 | 18 | 18 | 19 | no prediction | 18 |
#wrong predicted | 0 | 0 | 1 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
INSL5_HUMAN | stop position | 22 | 22 | 22 | 22 | no prediction | 22 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 0 | 0 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
LAMP1_HUMAN | stop position | 28 | 28 | 28 | 29 | no prediction | 28 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 0 | 1 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | transmembrane helix | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | no prediction | |
A4_HUMAN | stop position | 17 | 17 | 17 | 18 | no prediction | 17 |
#wrong residues | 0 | 0 | 1 | no prediction | 0 | ||
location | transmembrane helix | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | no prediction | secretory pathway | secretory pathway | |
Average number of wrong prediction | |||||||
sum of wrong predicted residues | 0 | 3 | 2 | no prediction | 0 | ||
#right predicted locations / #predicted locations | 3/5 | 3/5 | no prediction | 3/5 | no prediction |
SPOCTOPUS and SignalP do not predict the location of the protein, they only predict the start and stop position of the signal peptide. Furthermore, SignalP predicts if it is a signal peptide or not.
In contrast, TargetP only predicts the location of the protein, not the start and stop position of the signal peptide. Only Phobius and PolyPhobius predict both.
Therefore, it is difficult to compare the different methods. First of all, Phobius and PolyPhobius have more power than the other prediction methods, because they predict both. In average they predict the location and also the position as good as the other prediction methods. None of the methods could predict the transmembrane proteins, all methods predict them as proteins of the secretory pathway. Therefore, it is useful to use Phobius or PolyPhobius, because they predict more than the other methods. Furthermore, both methods can also predict transmembrane helices.
The results of Phobius were a litte bit better than the results of PolyPhobius.
We also wanted to mention, that SignalP gave you the possibility to choose between the prediction for eukaryotes, gram-positive bacteria and gram-negative bacteria. In our analyse we also analysied BACR_HALSA, which is an archaea protein. We tested all three prediction methods for this protein and all three methods failed. BACR_HALSA don't posses a signal peptide, but every method predicts one. Only the eukaryotic prediction method recogniced a signal anchor for BACR_HALSA, whereas the other two methods could not give a prediction of the location.
- Comparison of the combined methods
The last thing, which we wanted to compare, was the combined methods. SPOCTOPUS, Phobius and PolyPhobius can predict transmembrane helices as well as signal peptides. Therefore we combined our two further comparisons.
methods | ||||
Phobius | PolyPhobius | SPOCTOPUS | ||
HEXA_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 3 | 2 | |
location | right | right | no prediction | |
BACR_HALSA | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 29 | 17 | 17 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
location | n.a | n.a | no prediction | |
RET4_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
location | right | right | no prediction | |
INSL5_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 0 | 1 | |
location | right | right | no prediction | |
LAMP1_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 3 | 4 | 3 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
location | wrong | wrong | no prediction | |
A4_HUMAN | #wrong predicted residues (TM) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
#wrong predicted residues (SP) | 1 | 1 | 3 | |
location | wrong | wrong | no prediction | |
Average | ||||
avg(#wrong predicted residues (TM)) | 5.3 | 3.5 | 3.3 | |
avg(#wrong predicted residues (SP)) | 0.1 | 0.6 | 1 | |
#location (right predicted) / #location(predicted) | 3/5 | 3/5 | no prediction |
In general, PolyPhobius gave the best results. Although it predicts the singal peptide stop position a little bit badder than Phobius, the transmembrane prediction is significant bettern than by Phobius. The predictions of SPOCTOPUS are also good, but sadly SPOCTOPUS does not predict the location of the protein.
Therefore, it seems a good choice to use PolyPhobius, which is in average the best method for transmembrane and signal peptide prediction.
Prediction of GO terms
Before we start with our analysis, we decided to check the GO annotations for the six sequences, which can be found [here]:
A detailed list of the GO annotation terms of each protein can be found [here].
Results
We created for each protein an own result page. Sadly, it is not possible to summarize the results in a short way, so please have a look at the different result pages for a detailed output.
- [HEXA HUMAN]
- [BACR HALSA]
- [RET4 HUMAN]
- [INSL5 HUMAN]
- [LAMP1 HUMAN]
- [A4 HUMAN]
Comparison of the different methods
It is difficult to compare these methods. First of all, two methods are based on homology-based prediction, whereas ProtFun is based on ab initio prediction. So it is clear, that the results differ. Second, each method has another prediction focus and called the results a little bit different. Only GOPET predicts exact GO numbers, the other two methods only predict the approximate functions and processes.
Therefore, to compare the results, we decided to calculate the fraction of right prediction and the ratio between right predictions and annotated GO terms.
methods | |||||
GOPET terms | GOPET GOids | Pfam | ProtFun | ||
HEXA_HUMAN | #true positive | 7 | 7 | 2 | 31 |
#false negative | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 | |
#predictions | 8 | 8 | 2 | 34 | |
#GO terms | 25 | ||||
true positive (in %) | 0.87 | 0.87 | 1 | 0.91 | |
ratio true positive/annotated GO terms | 0.28 | 0.28 | 0.08 | not possible | |
BACR_HALSA | #true positive | 2 | 1 | 1 | 30 |
#false negative | 1 | 2 | 0 | 4 | |
#predictions | 3 | 3 | 1 | 34 | |
#GO terms | 12 | ||||
true positive (in %) | 0.66 | 0.33 | 1 | 0.88 | |
ratio true positive/annotated GO terms | 0.16 | 0.08 | 0.08 | not possible | |
RET4_HUMAN | #true positive | 5 | 5 | 1 | 30 |
#false negative | 3 | 3 | 0 | 4 | |
#predictions | 8 | 8 | 1 | 34 | |
#GO terms | 41 | ||||
true positive (in %) | 0.62 | 0.62 | 1 | 0.88 | |
ratio true positive/annotated GO terms | 0.12 | 0.12 | 0.02 | not possible | |
INSL5_HUMAN | #true positive | 1 | 1 | 1 | 32 |
#false negative | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | |
#predictions | 1 | 1 | 1 | 34 | |
#GO terms | 4 | ||||
true positive (in %) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0.94 | |
ratio true positive/annotated GO terms | 0.25 | 0.25 | 0.25 | not possible | |
LAMP1_HUMAN | #true positive | 0 | 0 | 1 | 33 |
#false negative | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | |
#predictions | 2 | 2 | 1 | 34 | |
#GO terms | 17 | ||||
true positive (in %) | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0.97 | |
ratio true positive/annotated GO terms | 0 | 0 | 0.05 | not possible | |
A4_HUMAN | #true positive | 7 | 7 | 6 | 33 |
#false negative | 6 | 6 | 0 | 1 | |
#predictions | 13 | 13 | 6 | 34 | |
#GO terms | 78 | ||||
true positive (in %) | 0.53 | 0.53 | 1 | 0.97 | |
ratio true positive/annotated GO terms | 0.08 | 0.08 | 0.07 | not possible |
As you can see in the table above, each method only predicts a small subgroup of the real annotated GO terms. In general, GOPET seems to be the best method, because GOPET is the only method which predicts the GO Terms and in sum, it has mostly the best ratio by prediction true positive. Furthermore, it also predicts more GO terms than the other methods.
It was not possible to calculate the ratio between true positives and annotated GO terms for ProtFun, because this method has defined terms and only predicts the probability, that the protein belongs to these terms.
In general, you can say GO term prediction does not work very well and the prediction results only give hints of the function and localization of the protein.
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