Abstract

Non-synonymous SNPs (nsSNPs), also known as Single Amino acid Polymorphisms (SAPs) account for the majority of human inherited diseases. It is important to distinguish the deleterious SAPs from neutral ones. Most traditional computational methods to classify SAPs are based on sequential or structural features. However, these features cannot fully explain the association between a SAP and the observed pathophysiological phenotype. We believe the better rationale for deleterious SAP prediction should be: If a SAP lies in the protein with important functions and it can change the protein sequence and structure severely, it is more likely related to disease. So we established a method to predict deleterious SAPs based on both protein interaction network and traditional hybrid properties. Each SAP is represented by 472 features that include sequential features, structural features and network features. Maximum Relevance Minimum Redundancy (mRMR) method and Incremental Feature Selection (IFS) were applied to obtain the optimal feature set and the prediction model was Nearest Neighbor Algorithm (NNA). In jackknife cross-validation, 83.27% of SAPs were correctly predicted when the optimized 263 features were used. The optimized predictor with 263 features was also tested in an independent dataset and the accuracy was still 80.00%. In contrast, SIFT, a widely used predictor of deleterious SAPs based on sequential features, has a prediction accuracy of 71.05% on the same dataset. In our study, network features were found to be most important for accurate prediction and can significantly improve the prediction performance. Our results suggest that the protein interaction context could provide important clues to help better illustrate SAP's functional association. This research will facilitate the post genome-wide association studies.

Highlights

  • Millions of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been collected in the public database, dbSNP [1], and it is estimated that,90% of human sequence variants are SNPs [2]

  • Comparison with SIFT To compare our method with SIFT, we analyzed the same data used in our predictor with SIFT

  • The prediction accuracy of SIFT was 71.05%, which is lower than our method

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Summary

Introduction

Millions of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been collected in the public database, dbSNP [1], and it is estimated that ,90% of human sequence variants are SNPs [2]. Non-synonymous SNPs (nsSNPs), known as single amino acid polymorphisms (SAPs), that lead to a single amino acid change in the protein product are most relevant to human inherited diseases [3]. The Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) [4] and the Human gene mutation database (HGMD) [3], contain records of disease-causing variants and suggest that the majority of the disease-causing variants are non-synonymous changes [5]. It is estimated that there are 67,000–200,000 nsSNPs in the human population [5]. Some of these nsSNPs are disease-associated, while others are functionally neutral. It is important to discriminate disease-associated nsSNPs from neutral ones for the investigation of genetic diseases

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