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Prediction of MHC-binding peptides of flexible lengths from sequence-derived structural and physicochemical properties.
Cui, J; Han, L Y; Lin, H H; Zhang, H L; Tang, Z Q; Zheng, C J; Cao, Z W; Chen, Y Z.
Afiliação
  • Cui J; Bioinformatics and Drug Design Group, Department of Pharmacy and Department of Computational Science, National University of Singapore, Singapore 117543, Republic of Singapore.
Mol Immunol ; 44(5): 866-77, 2007 Feb.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16806474
Peptide binding to MHC is critical for antigen recognition by T-cells. To facilitate vaccine design, computational methods have been developed for predicting MHC-binding peptides, which achieve impressive prediction accuracies of 70-90% for binders and 40-80% for non-binders. These methods have been developed for peptides of fixed lengths, for a limited number of alleles, trained from small number of non-binders, and in some cases based straightforwardly on sequence. These limit prediction coverage and accuracy particularly for non-binders. It is desirable to explore methods that predict binders of flexible lengths from sequence-derived physicochemical properties and trained from diverse sets of non-binders. This work explores support vector machines (SVM) as such a method for developing prediction systems of 18 MHC class I and 12 class II alleles by using 4208-3252 binders and 234,333-168,793 non-binders, and evaluated by an independent set of 545-476 binders and 110,564-84,430 non-binders. Binder accuracies are 86-99% for 25 and 70-80% for 5 alleles, non-binder accuracies are 96-99% for 30 alleles. Binder accuracies are comparable and non-binder accuracies substantially improved against other results. Our method correctly predicts 73.3% of the 15 newly-published epitopes in the last 4 months of 2005. Of the 251 recently-published HLA-A*0201 non-epitopes predicted as binders by other methods, 63 are predicted as binders by our method. Screening of HIV-1 genome shows that, compared to other methods, a comparable percentage (75-100%) of its known epitopes is correctly predicted, while a lower percentage (0.01-5% for 24 and 5-8% for 6 alleles) of its constituent peptides are predicted as binders. Our software can be accessed at .
Assuntos
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Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Oligopeptídeos / Alelos / Antígenos HLA Tipo de estudo: Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2007 Tipo de documento: Article
Buscar no Google
Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Oligopeptídeos / Alelos / Antígenos HLA Tipo de estudo: Prognostic_studies / Risk_factors_studies Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2007 Tipo de documento: Article