Abstract

BackgroundCaspases belong to a class of cysteine proteases which function as critical effectors in apoptosis and inflammation by cleaving substrates immediately after unique sites. Prediction of such cleavage sites will complement structural and functional studies on substrates cleavage as well as discovery of new substrates. Recently, different computational methods have been developed to predict the cleavage sites of caspase substrates with varying degrees of success. As the support vector machines (SVM) algorithm has been shown to be useful in several biological classification problems, we have implemented an SVM-based method to investigate its applicability to this domain.ResultsA set of unique caspase substrates cleavage sites were obtained from literature and used for evaluating the SVM method. Datasets containing (i) the tetrapeptide cleavage sites, (ii) the tetrapeptide cleavage sites, augmented by two adjacent residues, P1' and P2' amino acids and (iii) the tetrapeptide cleavage sites with ten additional upstream and downstream flanking sequences (where available) were tested. The SVM method achieved an accuracy ranging from 81.25% to 97.92% on independent test sets. The SVM method successfully predicted the cleavage of a novel caspase substrate and its mutants.ConclusionThis study presents an SVM approach for predicting caspase substrate cleavage sites based on the cleavage sites and the downstream and upstream flanking sequences. The method shows an improvement over existing methods and may be useful for predicting hitherto undiscovered cleavage sites.

Highlights

  • Caspases belong to a class of cysteine proteases which function as critical effectors in apoptosis and inflammation by cleaving substrates immediately after unique sites

  • Caspases belong to a unique class of cysteine proteases which function as critical effectors of apoptosis, inflammation and other important cellular processes such as cell proliferation, cell differentiation, cell migration and receptor internalization [1,2,3]

  • We have shown that the support vector machines (SVM) method is a rigorous and effective approach for predicting cleavage sites of caspase substrates

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Summary

Introduction

Caspases belong to a class of cysteine proteases which function as critical effectors in apoptosis and inflammation by cleaving substrates immediately after unique sites. Prediction of such cleavage sites will complement structural and functional studies on substrates cleavage as well as discovery of new substrates. Caspases belong to a unique class of cysteine proteases which function as critical effectors of apoptosis, inflammation and other important cellular processes such as cell proliferation, cell differentiation, cell migration and receptor internalization [1,2,3]. To date at least 14 mammalian caspases have been discovered and they can be grouped into three classes based on their preferential tetrapeptide specificities [5]. The development of computational tools to accurately capture complex sequence patterns and to automate the identification of new cleavage sites would be valuable

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