What In Your Opinion Is The Best Tool For Protein Function Prediction?
7
3
Entering edit mode
13.5 years ago
Eminencenoir ▴ 50

There are no wrong answers rather opinions that I would value

protein function • 3.8k views
ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode

Well, that clearly depends on what you define as protein function. Enzymes-only? Every protein that binds something? And what is that something? Small ligands? RNA? DNA? Other proteins?

Chris

ADD REPLY
5
Entering edit mode
13.5 years ago
Nir London ▴ 220

A review from 2 years ago (though probably still considered recent) offers ~40 tools for function prediction categorized by different approaches.

Trends Biotechnol. 2009 Apr;27(4):210-9. Epub 2009 Feb 27. Protein function prediction--the power of multiplicity. Rentzsch R, Orengo CA.

Also, join the coming Automated Function Prediction SIG2011 at ISMB 2011 to discover the bleeding edge of computational function prediction.

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode
13.5 years ago
Chris ★ 1.6k

I would use a webservice that wraps a whole bunch of predictors. A good one is e.g. http://www.predictprotein.org which is developed in our group. It is sequence based and returns a variety of structure- and function predictions.

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

BLASTing against an annotated sequence database might also help ;-)

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode
13.5 years ago
Michael 55k

I would say:

  1. a PFAM search
  2. Blast against Swiss-prot
ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode
13.1 years ago
Leszek 4.2k

There is similar thread.

I'm happy with InterPro scan. It integrates multiple databases: PROSITE, PRINTS, Pfam, ProDom, SMART, TIGRFAMs, PIR superfamily, SUPERFAMILY, Gene3D, PANTHER and HAMAP. This means, often you will get functional annotation from multiple, independent sources. In addition, another tools like SignalP can be optionally launched by InterPro. But it's quite computationally extensive - you will need a cluster to annotate whole genome.

ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode
13.0 years ago
User 6169 ▴ 20

There is a webtool named ProtoNet: http://www.protonet.cs.huji.ac.il/. ProtoNet provides automatic hierarchical classification of proteins according to sequences. So you can get many kind of annotations of related proteins. Try the "Classify Your Protein" tool within ProtoNet.

ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 1783 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6