Cargando…

MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites

Mitochondria provide numerous essential functions for cells and their dysfunction leads to a variety of diseases. Thus, obtaining a complete mitochondrial proteome should be a crucial step toward understanding the roles of mitochondria. Many mitochondrial proteins have been identified experimentally...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Fukasawa, Yoshinori, Tsuji, Junko, Fu, Szu-Chin, Tomii, Kentaro, Horton, Paul, Imai, Kenichiro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4390256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25670805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M114.043083
_version_ 1782365665312636928
author Fukasawa, Yoshinori
Tsuji, Junko
Fu, Szu-Chin
Tomii, Kentaro
Horton, Paul
Imai, Kenichiro
author_facet Fukasawa, Yoshinori
Tsuji, Junko
Fu, Szu-Chin
Tomii, Kentaro
Horton, Paul
Imai, Kenichiro
author_sort Fukasawa, Yoshinori
collection PubMed
description Mitochondria provide numerous essential functions for cells and their dysfunction leads to a variety of diseases. Thus, obtaining a complete mitochondrial proteome should be a crucial step toward understanding the roles of mitochondria. Many mitochondrial proteins have been identified experimentally but a complete list is not yet available. To fill this gap, methods to computationally predict mitochondrial proteins from amino acid sequence have been developed and are widely used, but unfortunately, their accuracy is far from perfect. Here we describe MitoFates, an improved prediction method for cleavable N-terminal mitochondrial targeting signals (presequences) and their cleavage sites. MitoFates introduces novel sequence features including positively charged amphiphilicity, presequence motifs, and position weight matrices modeling the presequence cleavage sites. These features are combined with classical ones such as amino acid composition and physico-chemical properties as input to a standard support vector machine classifier. On independent test data, MitoFates attains better performance than existing predictors in both detection of presequences and in predicting their cleavage sites. We used MitoFates to look for undiscovered mitochondrial proteins from 42,217 human proteins (including isoforms such as alternative splicing or translation initiation variants). MitoFates predicts 1167 genes to have at least one isoform with a presequence. Five-hundred and eighty of these genes were not annotated as mitochondrial in either UniProt or Gene Ontology. Interestingly, these include candidate regulators of parkin translocation to damaged mitochondria, and also many genes with known disease mutations, suggesting that careful investigation of MitoFates predictions may be helpful in elucidating the role of mitochondria in health and disease. MitoFates is open source with a convenient web server publicly available.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4390256
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-43902562015-04-17 MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites Fukasawa, Yoshinori Tsuji, Junko Fu, Szu-Chin Tomii, Kentaro Horton, Paul Imai, Kenichiro Mol Cell Proteomics Technological Innovation and Resources Mitochondria provide numerous essential functions for cells and their dysfunction leads to a variety of diseases. Thus, obtaining a complete mitochondrial proteome should be a crucial step toward understanding the roles of mitochondria. Many mitochondrial proteins have been identified experimentally but a complete list is not yet available. To fill this gap, methods to computationally predict mitochondrial proteins from amino acid sequence have been developed and are widely used, but unfortunately, their accuracy is far from perfect. Here we describe MitoFates, an improved prediction method for cleavable N-terminal mitochondrial targeting signals (presequences) and their cleavage sites. MitoFates introduces novel sequence features including positively charged amphiphilicity, presequence motifs, and position weight matrices modeling the presequence cleavage sites. These features are combined with classical ones such as amino acid composition and physico-chemical properties as input to a standard support vector machine classifier. On independent test data, MitoFates attains better performance than existing predictors in both detection of presequences and in predicting their cleavage sites. We used MitoFates to look for undiscovered mitochondrial proteins from 42,217 human proteins (including isoforms such as alternative splicing or translation initiation variants). MitoFates predicts 1167 genes to have at least one isoform with a presequence. Five-hundred and eighty of these genes were not annotated as mitochondrial in either UniProt or Gene Ontology. Interestingly, these include candidate regulators of parkin translocation to damaged mitochondria, and also many genes with known disease mutations, suggesting that careful investigation of MitoFates predictions may be helpful in elucidating the role of mitochondria in health and disease. MitoFates is open source with a convenient web server publicly available. The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2015-04 2015-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4390256/ /pubmed/25670805 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M114.043083 Text en © 2015 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version full access.
spellingShingle Technological Innovation and Resources
Fukasawa, Yoshinori
Tsuji, Junko
Fu, Szu-Chin
Tomii, Kentaro
Horton, Paul
Imai, Kenichiro
MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites
title MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites
title_full MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites
title_fullStr MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites
title_full_unstemmed MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites
title_short MitoFates: Improved Prediction of Mitochondrial Targeting Sequences and Their Cleavage Sites
title_sort mitofates: improved prediction of mitochondrial targeting sequences and their cleavage sites
topic Technological Innovation and Resources
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4390256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25670805
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M114.043083
work_keys_str_mv AT fukasawayoshinori mitofatesimprovedpredictionofmitochondrialtargetingsequencesandtheircleavagesites
AT tsujijunko mitofatesimprovedpredictionofmitochondrialtargetingsequencesandtheircleavagesites
AT fuszuchin mitofatesimprovedpredictionofmitochondrialtargetingsequencesandtheircleavagesites
AT tomiikentaro mitofatesimprovedpredictionofmitochondrialtargetingsequencesandtheircleavagesites
AT hortonpaul mitofatesimprovedpredictionofmitochondrialtargetingsequencesandtheircleavagesites
AT imaikenichiro mitofatesimprovedpredictionofmitochondrialtargetingsequencesandtheircleavagesites