Abstract

A wide range of biological processes, including regulation of gene expression, protein synthesis, and replication and assembly of many viruses are mediated by RNA-protein interactions. However, experimental determination of the structures of protein-RNA complexes is expensive and technically challenging. Hence, a number of computational tools have been developed for predicting protein-RNA interfaces. Some of the state-of-the-art protein-RNA interface predictors rely on position-specific scoring matrix (PSSM)-based encoding of the protein sequences. The computational efforts needed for generating PSSMs severely limits the practical utility of protein-RNA interface prediction servers. In this work, we experiment with two approaches, random sampling and sequence similarity reduction, for extracting a representative reference database of protein sequences from more than 50 million protein sequences in UniRef100. Our results suggest that random sampled databases produce better PSSM profiles (in terms of the number of hits used to generate the profile and the distance of the generated profile to the corresponding profile generated using the entire UniRef100 data as well as the accuracy of the machine learning classifier trained using these profiles). Based on our results, we developed FastRNABindR, an improved version of RNABindR for predicting protein-RNA interface residues using PSSM profiles generated using 1% of the UniRef100 sequences sampled uniformly at random. To the best of our knowledge, FastRNABindR is the only protein-RNA interface residue prediction online server that requires generation of PSSM profiles for query sequences and accepts hundreds of protein sequences per submission. Our approach for determining the optimal BLAST database for a protein-RNA interface residue classification task has the potential of substantially speeding up, and hence increasing the practical utility of, other amino acid sequence based predictors of protein-protein and protein-DNA interfaces.

Highlights

  • Protein-RNA interactions play key roles in many biological processes including protein synthesis, DNA repair, DNA replication, regulation of gene expression, and viral replication [1,2,3,4,5].PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0158445 July 6, 2016member of Qatar Foundation)

  • The sequence databases used for homology search (i.e., NCBI BLAST databases) are regularly updated to improve their coverage

  • NCBI nr BLAST database has more than 78 million protein sequences and this number is expected to further increase as ongoing sequencing projects generate additional data

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Summary

Introduction

Protein-RNA interactions play key roles in many biological processes including protein synthesis, DNA repair, DNA replication, regulation of gene expression, and viral replication [1,2,3,4,5].PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0158445 July 6, 2016member of Qatar Foundation). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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