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Characterization of protein families, sequence patterns, and functional annotations in large data sets

Bioinformatics involves storing, analyzing and making predictions on massive amounts of protein and nucleotide sequence data. The thesis consists of six papers and is focused on proteins. It describes the utilization of bioinformatics techniques to characterize protein families and to detect patterns in gene expression and in polypeptide occurrences. Two protein families were bioinformatically characterized - the membrane associated proteins in eicosanoid and glutathione metabolism (MAPEG) and the Tripartite motif (TRIM) protein families. In the study of the MAPEG super-family, application of different bioinformatic methods made it possible to characterize many new members leading to a doubling of the family size. Furthermore, the MAPEG members were subdivided into families. Remarkably, in six families with previously predominantly mammalian members, fish representatives were also now detected, which dated the origin of these families back to the Cambrium ”species explosion”, thus earlier than previously anticipated. Sequence comparisons made it possible to define diagnostic sequence patterns that can be used in genome annotations. Upon publication of several MAPEG structures, these patterns were confirmed to be part of the active sites. In the TRIM study, the bioinformatic analyses made it possible to subdivide the proteins into three subtypes and to characterize a large number of members. In addition, the analyses showed crucial structural dependencies between the RING and the B-box domains of the TRIM member Ro52. The linker region between the two domains, denoted RBL, is known to be disease associated. Now, an amphipathic helix was found to be a characteristic feature of the RBL region, which also was used to divide the family into three subtypes. The ontology annotation treebrowser (OAT) tool was developed to detect functional similarities or common concepts in long lists of proteins or genes, typically generated from proteomics or microarray experiments. OAT was the first annotation browser to include both Gene Ontology (GO) and Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) into the same framework. The complementarity of these two ontologies was demonstrated. OAT was used in the TRIM study to detect differences in functional annotations between the subtypes. In the oligopeptide study, we investigated pentapeptide patterns that were over- or under-represented in the current de facto standard database of protein knowledge and a set of completed genomes, compared to what could be expected from amino acid compositions. We found three predominant categories of patterns: (i) patterns originating from frequently occurring families, e.g. respiratory chain-associated proteins and translation machinery proteins; (ii) proteins with structurally and/or functionally favored patterns; (iii) multicopy species-specific retrotransposons, only found in the genome set. Such patterns may influence amino acid residue based prediction algorithms. These findings in the oligopeptide study were utilized for development of a new method that detects translated introns in unverified protein predictions, which are available in great numbers due to the many completed and ongoing genome projects. A new comprehensive database of protein sequences from completed genomes was developed, denoted genomeLKPG. This database was of central importance in the MAPEG, TRIM and oligopeptide studies. The new sequence database has also been proven useful in several other studies.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UPSALLA1/oai:DiVA.org:liu-10565
Date January 2008
CreatorsBresell, Anders
PublisherLinköpings universitet, Bioinformatik, Linköpings universitet, Tekniska högskolan, Institutionen för fysik, kemi och biologi
Source SetsDiVA Archive at Upsalla University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDoctoral thesis, comprehensive summary, info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
RelationLinköping Studies in Science and Technology. Dissertations, 0345-7524 ; 1159

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