MUSI: an integrated system for identifying multiple specificity from very large peptide or nucleic acid data sets.

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Version: Final published version
Serval ID
serval:BIB_55E64F2C6DDD
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
MUSI: an integrated system for identifying multiple specificity from very large peptide or nucleic acid data sets.
Journal
Nucleic Acids Research
Author(s)
Kim T., Tyndel M.S., Huang H., Sidhu S.S., Bader G.D., Gfeller D., Kim P.M.
ISSN
1362-4962 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0305-1048
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2012
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
40
Number
6
Pages
e47
Language
english
Abstract
Peptide recognition domains and transcription factors play crucial roles in cellular signaling. They bind linear stretches of amino acids or nucleotides, respectively, with high specificity. Experimental techniques that assess the binding specificity of these domains, such as microarrays or phage display, can retrieve thousands of distinct ligands, providing detailed insight into binding specificity. In particular, the advent of next-generation sequencing has recently increased the throughput of such methods by several orders of magnitude. These advances have helped reveal the presence of distinct binding specificity classes that co-exist within a set of ligands interacting with the same target. Here, we introduce a software system called MUSI that can rapidly analyze very large data sets of binding sequences to determine the relevant binding specificity patterns. Our pipeline provides two major advances. First, it can detect previously unrecognized multiple specificity patterns in any data set. Second, it offers integrated processing of very large data sets from next-generation sequencing machines. The results are visualized as multiple sequence logos describing the different binding preferences of the protein under investigation. We demonstrate the performance of MUSI by analyzing recent phage display data for human SH3 domains as well as microarray data for mouse transcription factors.

Keywords
Animals, Binding Sites, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Ligands, Mice, Peptide Library, Peptides/chemistry, Position-Specific Scoring Matrices, Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs, Sequence Analysis, Protein, Software, Transcription Factors/metabolism, src Homology Domains
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
15/12/2014 14:21
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:10
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