Abstract

Protein-RNA interactions play important roles in cellular processes like protein synthesis, RNA processing, and gene expression regulation. Reliable identification of the interfaces involved in RNA-protein interactions is essential for comprehending the mechanisms and the functional implications of these interactions and provides a valuable guide for rational drug discovery and design. Because the determination of 3D structures of protein-RNA complexes has various technical limitations and is typically costly, reliable in silico interface prediction methods that require only the sequence information are urgently needed.We present HomPRIP, a homologous sequence based method for predicting protein-RNA interfaces, based on our conservation analysis of protein-RNA interfaces. We test Hom-PRIP on a benchmark dataset of 199 proteins and compare it with the state-of-the-art protein-RNA interface prediction methods. Our results show that HomPRIP can reliably identify protein-RNA interface residues in 71% of test proteins with at least one putative sequence homolog passing the similarity thresholds of HomPRIP. Moreover, to facilitate predictions for proteins with no identified homologs, we develop HomPRIP-NB, a method combining the HomPRIP predictor and a Naive Bayes (NB) classifier trained using evolutionary information derived from alignments against the NCBI nr database. Our results suggest that HomPRIP-NB significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art machine learning methods for predicting protein-RNA interface residues.

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