Cargando…

Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens

Computational genome analysis enables systematic identification of potential immunogenic proteins within a pathogen. Immunogenicity is a system property that arises through the interaction of host and pathogen as mediated through the medium of a immunogenic protein. The overt dissimilarity of pathog...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ramakrishnan, Kamna, Flower, Darren R
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Biomedical Informatics 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3040004/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21346878
_version_ 1782198265544966144
author Ramakrishnan, Kamna
Flower, Darren R
author_facet Ramakrishnan, Kamna
Flower, Darren R
author_sort Ramakrishnan, Kamna
collection PubMed
description Computational genome analysis enables systematic identification of potential immunogenic proteins within a pathogen. Immunogenicity is a system property that arises through the interaction of host and pathogen as mediated through the medium of a immunogenic protein. The overt dissimilarity of pathogenic proteins when compared to the host proteome is conjectured by some to be the determining principal of immunogenicity. Previously, we explored this idea in the context of Bacterial, Viral, and Fungal antigen. In this paper, we broaden and extend our analysis to include complex antigens of eukaryotic origin, arising from tumours and from parasite pathogens. For both types of antigen, known antigenic and non-antigenic protein sequences were compared to human and mouse proteomes. In contrast to our previous results, both visual inspection and statistical evaluation indicate a much wider range of homologues and a significant level of discrimination; but, as before, we could not determine a viable threshold capable of properly separating non-antigen from antigen. In concert with our previous work, we conclude that global proteome dissimilarity is not a useful metric for immunogenicity for presently available antigens arising from Bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites, and tumours. While we see some signal for certain antigen types, using dissimilarity is not a useful approach to identifying antigenic molecules within pathogen genomes.
format Text
id pubmed-3040004
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2010
publisher Biomedical Informatics
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-30400042011-02-23 Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens Ramakrishnan, Kamna Flower, Darren R Bioinformation Hypothesis Computational genome analysis enables systematic identification of potential immunogenic proteins within a pathogen. Immunogenicity is a system property that arises through the interaction of host and pathogen as mediated through the medium of a immunogenic protein. The overt dissimilarity of pathogenic proteins when compared to the host proteome is conjectured by some to be the determining principal of immunogenicity. Previously, we explored this idea in the context of Bacterial, Viral, and Fungal antigen. In this paper, we broaden and extend our analysis to include complex antigens of eukaryotic origin, arising from tumours and from parasite pathogens. For both types of antigen, known antigenic and non-antigenic protein sequences were compared to human and mouse proteomes. In contrast to our previous results, both visual inspection and statistical evaluation indicate a much wider range of homologues and a significant level of discrimination; but, as before, we could not determine a viable threshold capable of properly separating non-antigen from antigen. In concert with our previous work, we conclude that global proteome dissimilarity is not a useful metric for immunogenicity for presently available antigens arising from Bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites, and tumours. While we see some signal for certain antigen types, using dissimilarity is not a useful approach to identifying antigenic molecules within pathogen genomes. Biomedical Informatics 2010-06-24 /pmc/articles/PMC3040004/ /pubmed/21346878 Text en © 2010 Biomedical Informatics This is an open-access article, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, for non-commercial purposes, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Hypothesis
Ramakrishnan, Kamna
Flower, Darren R
Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens
title Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens
title_full Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens
title_fullStr Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens
title_full_unstemmed Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens
title_short Discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity III: tumour and parasite antigens
title_sort discriminating antigen and non-antigen using proteome dissimilarity iii: tumour and parasite antigens
topic Hypothesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3040004/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21346878
work_keys_str_mv AT ramakrishnankamna discriminatingantigenandnonantigenusingproteomedissimilarityiiitumourandparasiteantigens
AT flowerdarrenr discriminatingantigenandnonantigenusingproteomedissimilarityiiitumourandparasiteantigens