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Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses

Viruses infect humans and progress inside the body leading to various diseases and complications. The phosphorylation of viral proteins catalyzed by host kinases plays crucial regulatory roles in enhancing replication and inhibition of normal host-cell functions. Due to its biological importance, th...

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Autores principales: Bretaña, Neil Arvin, Lu, Cheng-Tsung, Chiang, Chiu-Yun, Su, Min-Gang, Huang, Kai-Yao, Lee, Tzong-Yi, Weng, Shun-Long
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3402495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22844408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040694
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author Bretaña, Neil Arvin
Lu, Cheng-Tsung
Chiang, Chiu-Yun
Su, Min-Gang
Huang, Kai-Yao
Lee, Tzong-Yi
Weng, Shun-Long
author_facet Bretaña, Neil Arvin
Lu, Cheng-Tsung
Chiang, Chiu-Yun
Su, Min-Gang
Huang, Kai-Yao
Lee, Tzong-Yi
Weng, Shun-Long
author_sort Bretaña, Neil Arvin
collection PubMed
description Viruses infect humans and progress inside the body leading to various diseases and complications. The phosphorylation of viral proteins catalyzed by host kinases plays crucial regulatory roles in enhancing replication and inhibition of normal host-cell functions. Due to its biological importance, there is a desire to identify the protein phosphorylation sites on human viruses. However, the use of mass spectrometry-based experiments is proven to be expensive and labor-intensive. Furthermore, previous studies which have identified phosphorylation sites in human viruses do not include the investigation of the responsible kinases. Thus, we are motivated to propose a new method to identify protein phosphorylation sites with its kinase substrate specificity on human viruses. The experimentally verified phosphorylation data were extracted from virPTM – a database containing 301 experimentally verified phosphorylation data on 104 human kinase-phosphorylated virus proteins. In an attempt to investigate kinase substrate specificities in viral protein phosphorylation sites, maximal dependence decomposition (MDD) is employed to cluster a large set of phosphorylation data into subgroups containing significantly conserved motifs. The experimental human phosphorylation sites are collected from Phospho.ELM, grouped according to its kinase annotation, and compared with the virus MDD clusters. This investigation identifies human kinases such as CK2, PKB, CDK, and MAPK as potential kinases for catalyzing virus protein substrates as confirmed by published literature. Profile hidden Markov model is then applied to learn a predictive model for each subgroup. A five-fold cross validation evaluation on the MDD-clustered HMMs yields an average accuracy of 84.93% for Serine, and 78.05% for Threonine. Furthermore, an independent testing data collected from UniProtKB and Phospho.ELM is used to make a comparison of predictive performance on three popular kinase-specific phosphorylation site prediction tools. In the independent testing, the high sensitivity and specificity of the proposed method demonstrate the predictive effectiveness of the identified substrate motifs and the importance of investigating potential kinases for viral protein phosphorylation sites.
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spelling pubmed-34024952012-07-27 Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses Bretaña, Neil Arvin Lu, Cheng-Tsung Chiang, Chiu-Yun Su, Min-Gang Huang, Kai-Yao Lee, Tzong-Yi Weng, Shun-Long PLoS One Research Article Viruses infect humans and progress inside the body leading to various diseases and complications. The phosphorylation of viral proteins catalyzed by host kinases plays crucial regulatory roles in enhancing replication and inhibition of normal host-cell functions. Due to its biological importance, there is a desire to identify the protein phosphorylation sites on human viruses. However, the use of mass spectrometry-based experiments is proven to be expensive and labor-intensive. Furthermore, previous studies which have identified phosphorylation sites in human viruses do not include the investigation of the responsible kinases. Thus, we are motivated to propose a new method to identify protein phosphorylation sites with its kinase substrate specificity on human viruses. The experimentally verified phosphorylation data were extracted from virPTM – a database containing 301 experimentally verified phosphorylation data on 104 human kinase-phosphorylated virus proteins. In an attempt to investigate kinase substrate specificities in viral protein phosphorylation sites, maximal dependence decomposition (MDD) is employed to cluster a large set of phosphorylation data into subgroups containing significantly conserved motifs. The experimental human phosphorylation sites are collected from Phospho.ELM, grouped according to its kinase annotation, and compared with the virus MDD clusters. This investigation identifies human kinases such as CK2, PKB, CDK, and MAPK as potential kinases for catalyzing virus protein substrates as confirmed by published literature. Profile hidden Markov model is then applied to learn a predictive model for each subgroup. A five-fold cross validation evaluation on the MDD-clustered HMMs yields an average accuracy of 84.93% for Serine, and 78.05% for Threonine. Furthermore, an independent testing data collected from UniProtKB and Phospho.ELM is used to make a comparison of predictive performance on three popular kinase-specific phosphorylation site prediction tools. In the independent testing, the high sensitivity and specificity of the proposed method demonstrate the predictive effectiveness of the identified substrate motifs and the importance of investigating potential kinases for viral protein phosphorylation sites. Public Library of Science 2012-07-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3402495/ /pubmed/22844408 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040694 Text en Bretaña et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bretaña, Neil Arvin
Lu, Cheng-Tsung
Chiang, Chiu-Yun
Su, Min-Gang
Huang, Kai-Yao
Lee, Tzong-Yi
Weng, Shun-Long
Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses
title Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses
title_full Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses
title_fullStr Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses
title_full_unstemmed Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses
title_short Identifying Protein Phosphorylation Sites with Kinase Substrate Specificity on Human Viruses
title_sort identifying protein phosphorylation sites with kinase substrate specificity on human viruses
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3402495/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22844408
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040694
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