Hello,
could you please suggest me a PSWMs database for RNA binding proteins? I am interested in particular in DEAD-boxes.
Hello,
could you please suggest me a PSWMs database for RNA binding proteins? I am interested in particular in DEAD-boxes.
The only two databases that I know about are RBPDB and AREsite. RBPDB is for all sequence-specific RNA-binding proteins in metazoa and AREsite focuses on those that bind AU-rich elements.
RBPDB may contain some data on DEAD-box protein but this seems unlikely. Is there evidence that DEAD-box protein binding is sequence specific?
The dogma is that because dsRNA is generally in an A-form helix, that the major groove is too deep and narrow for dsRNA binding proteins to recognize base identity; unless there are deformations in the RNA helix like unmatched bases. My guess is that they won't show a strong sequence preference (if they do, that would be exciting). Maybe try a sequence and structure motif finding algorithm like CMfinder or RNApromo.
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for rpsblast or HMMER? have you looked at PFAM, CDD, etc.?
Thanks, I would like to use the MEME Suite (is the first time I deal with RNA binding proteins in silico, and I have a pipeline ready for TFs that I could mostly reuse). I am in search of binding site (RNA matrices or alignments), PFAM and CDD seem to provide proteins alignments.
Hi! I know I'm super late but, did you accomplished your task? I am quite new using MEME but I would like to do the same with some sequences that I have...Any advice would be great! Thanks
Hi, at that time I did not have that much success (but cannot remember details!). I guess things might have changed a bit in 6.3 years. If the sequences you have are putative binding sites, then all you need to do is to generate a PSWM (or a few, e.g. using MEME), then use some other tool (e.g. FIMO) to scan a database of interest for motif occurrence. If instead your sequences are the target of your motif hunt then you will have to find either ready-to-go PSWMs or sequences of putative binding sites (e.g. from literature).
Great! I will try with FIMO. Thanks!!
Ok, so you're searching matrices for sequence motifs where proteins bind, not the proteins themselves. That makes sense ;)