Abstract

The investigation of protein functionality often relies on the knowledge of crystal 3-D structure. This structure is not always known or easily unravelled, which is the case of eukaryotic cell membrane proteins such as G Protein-Coupled Receptors (GPCRs) and specially of those of class C, which are the target of the current study. In the absence of information about tertiary or quaternary structures, functionality can be investigated from the primary structure, that is, from the amino acid sequence. In previous research, we found that the different subtypes of class C GPCRs could be discriminated with a high level of accuracy from the n-gram transformation of their complete primary sequences, using a method that combined two-stage feature selection with kernel classifiers. This study aims at discovering whether subunits of the complete sequence retain such discrimination capabilities. We report experiments that show that the extracellular N-terminal domain of the receptor suffices to retain the classification accuracy of the complete sequence and that it does so using a reduced selection of n-grams whose length of up to five amino acids opens up an avenue for class C GPCR signature motif discovery.

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