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1.
Muscle Nerve ; 60(5): 621-628, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31397906

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Golden retriever muscular dystrophy (GRMD) is a spontaneous X-linked canine model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy that resembles the human condition. Muscle percentage index (MPI) is proposed as an imaging biomarker of disease severity in GRMD. METHODS: To assess MPI, we used MRI data acquired from nine GRMD samples using a 4.7 T small-bore scanner. A machine learning approach was used with eight raw quantitative mapping of MRI data images (T1m, T2m, two Dixon maps, and four diffusion tensor imaging maps), three types of texture descriptors (local binary pattern, gray-level co-occurrence matrix, gray-level run-length matrix), and a gradient descriptor (histogram of oriented gradients). RESULTS: The confusion matrix, averaged over all samples, showed 93.5% of muscle pixels classified correctly. The classification, optimized in a leave-one-out cross-validation, provided an average accuracy of 80% with a discrepancy in overestimation for young (8%) and old (20%) dogs. DISCUSSION: MPI could be useful for quantifying GRMD severity, but careful interpretation is needed for severe cases.


Subject(s)
Muscle, Skeletal/diagnostic imaging , Muscular Dystrophy, Animal/diagnostic imaging , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Dogs , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Muscular Dystrophy, Animal/pathology , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/diagnostic imaging , Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/pathology , Severity of Illness Index
2.
J Biomol NMR ; 70(1): 33-51, 2018 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29196969

ABSTRACT

Protein structure determination using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy can be both time-consuming and labor intensive. Here we demonstrate how chemical shift threading can permit rapid, robust, and accurate protein structure determination using only chemical shift data. Threading is a relatively old bioinformatics technique that uses a combination of sequence information and predicted (or experimentally acquired) low-resolution structural data to generate high-resolution 3D protein structures. The key motivations behind using NMR chemical shifts for protein threading lie in the fact that they are easy to measure, they are available prior to 3D structure determination, and they contain vital structural information. The method we have developed uses not only sequence and chemical shift similarity but also chemical shift-derived secondary structure, shift-derived super-secondary structure, and shift-derived accessible surface area to generate a high quality protein structure regardless of the sequence similarity (or lack thereof) to a known structure already in the PDB. The method (called E-Thrifty) was found to be very fast (often < 10 min/structure) and to significantly outperform other shift-based or threading-based structure determination methods (in terms of top template model accuracy)-with an average TM-score performance of 0.68 (vs. 0.50-0.62 for other methods). Coupled with recent developments in chemical shift refinement, these results suggest that protein structure determination, using only NMR chemical shifts, is becoming increasingly practical and reliable. E-Thrifty is available as a web server at http://ethrifty.ca .


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Sequence , Protein Structure, Secondary , Proteins/chemistry , Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Protein Conformation , Time Factors
3.
J Biomol NMR ; 62(3): 387-401, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26078090

ABSTRACT

Accessible surface area (ASA) is the surface area of an atom, amino acid or biomolecule that is exposed to solvent. The calculation of a molecule's ASA requires three-dimensional coordinate data and the use of a "rolling ball" algorithm to both define and calculate the ASA. For polymers such as proteins, the ASA for individual amino acids is closely related to the hydrophobicity of the amino acid as well as its local secondary and tertiary structure. For proteins, ASA is a structural descriptor that can often be as informative as secondary structure. Consequently there has been considerable effort over the past two decades to try to predict ASA from protein sequence data and to use ASA information (derived from chemical modification studies) as a structure constraint. Recently it has become evident that protein chemical shifts are also sensitive to ASA. Given the potential utility of ASA estimates as structural constraints for NMR we decided to explore this relationship further. Using machine learning techniques (specifically a boosted tree regression model) we developed an algorithm called "ShiftASA" that combines chemical-shift and sequence derived features to accurately estimate per-residue fractional ASA values of water-soluble proteins. This method showed a correlation coefficient between predicted and experimental values of 0.79 when evaluated on a set of 65 independent test proteins, which was an 8.2 % improvement over the next best performing (sequence-only) method. On a separate test set of 92 proteins, ShiftASA reported a mean correlation coefficient of 0.82, which was 12.3 % better than the next best performing method. ShiftASA is available as a web server ( http://shiftasa.wishartlab.com ) for submitting input queries for fractional ASA calculation.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular/methods , Proteins/chemistry , Algorithms , Internet , Machine Learning , Software , Surface Properties
4.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 43(W1): W370-7, 2015 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25979265

ABSTRACT

The Chemical Shift Index or CSI 3.0 (http://csi3.wishartlab.com) is a web server designed to accurately identify the location of secondary and super-secondary structures in protein chains using only nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) backbone chemical shifts and their corresponding protein sequence data. Unlike earlier versions of CSI, which only identified three types of secondary structure (helix, ß-strand and coil), CSI 3.0 now identifies total of 11 types of secondary and super-secondary structures, including helices, ß-strands, coil regions, five common ß-turns (type I, II, I', II' and VIII), ß hairpins as well as interior and edge ß-strands. CSI 3.0 accepts experimental NMR chemical shift data in multiple formats (NMR Star 2.1, NMR Star 3.1 and SHIFTY) and generates colorful CSI plots (bar graphs) and secondary/super-secondary structure assignments. The output can be readily used as constraints for structure determination and refinement or the images may be used for presentations and publications. CSI 3.0 uses a pipeline of several well-tested, previously published programs to identify the secondary and super-secondary structures in protein chains. Comparisons with secondary and super-secondary structure assignments made via standard coordinate analysis programs such as DSSP, STRIDE and VADAR on high-resolution protein structures solved by X-ray and NMR show >90% agreement between those made with CSI 3.0.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Protein Structure, Secondary , Software , Algorithms , Internet
5.
J Biomol NMR ; 60(2-3): 131-46, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25273503

ABSTRACT

Protein chemical shifts have long been used by NMR spectroscopists to assist with secondary structure assignment and to provide useful distance and torsion angle constraint data for structure determination. One of the most widely used methods for secondary structure identification is called the Chemical Shift Index (CSI). The CSI method uses a simple digital chemical shift filter to locate secondary structures along the protein chain using backbone (13)C and (1)H chemical shifts. While the CSI method is simple to use and easy to implement, it is only about 75-80% accurate. Here we describe a significantly improved version of the CSI (2.0) that uses machine-learning techniques to combine all six backbone chemical shifts ((13)Cα, (13)Cß, (13)C, (15)N, (1)HN, (1)Hα) with sequence-derived features to perform far more accurate secondary structure identification. Our tests indicate that CSI 2.0 achieved an average identification accuracy (Q3) of 90.56% for a training set of 181 proteins in a repeated tenfold cross-validation and 89.35% for a test set of 59 proteins. This represents a significant improvement over other state-of-the-art chemical shift-based methods. In particular, the level of performance of CSI 2.0 is equal to that of standard methods, such as DSSP and STRIDE, used to identify secondary structures via 3D coordinate data. This suggests that CSI 2.0 could be used both in providing accurate NMR constraint data in the early stages of protein structure determination as well as in defining secondary structure locations in the final protein model(s). A CSI 2.0 web server (http://csi.wishartlab.com) is available for submitting the input queries for secondary structure identification.


Subject(s)
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular , Software , Carbon Isotopes , Databases, Protein , Nitrogen Isotopes , Probability , Protein Structure, Secondary , Proteins/chemistry , Protons , Support Vector Machine
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