A benchmark server using high resolution protein structure data, and benchmark results for membrane helix predictions

EM Rath, D Tessier, AA Campbell, HC Lee, T Werner… - BMC …, 2013 - Springer
EM Rath, D Tessier, AA Campbell, HC Lee, T Werner, NK Salam, LK Lee, WB Church
BMC bioinformatics, 2013Springer
Background Helical membrane proteins are vital for the interaction of cells with their
environment. Predicting the location of membrane helices in protein amino acid sequences
provides substantial understanding of their structure and function and identifies membrane
proteins in sequenced genomes. Currently there is no comprehensive benchmark tool for
evaluating prediction methods, and there is no publication comparing all available
prediction tools. Current benchmark literature is outdated, as recently determined membrane …
Background
Helical membrane proteins are vital for the interaction of cells with their environment. Predicting the location of membrane helices in protein amino acid sequences provides substantial understanding of their structure and function and identifies membrane proteins in sequenced genomes. Currently there is no comprehensive benchmark tool for evaluating prediction methods, and there is no publication comparing all available prediction tools. Current benchmark literature is outdated, as recently determined membrane protein structures are not included. Current literature is also limited to global assessments, as specialised benchmarks for predicting specific classes of membrane proteins were not previously carried out.
Description
We present a benchmark server at http://sydney.edu.au/pharmacy/sbio/software/TMH_benchmark.shtml that uses recent high resolution protein structural data to provide a comprehensive assessment of the accuracy of existing membrane helix prediction methods. The server further allows a user to compare uploaded predictions generated by novel methods, permitting the comparison of these novel methods against all existing methods compared by the server. Benchmark metrics include sensitivity and specificity of predictions for membrane helix location and orientation, and many others. The server allows for customised evaluations such as assessing prediction method performances for specific helical membrane protein subtypes.
We report results for custom benchmarks which illustrate how the server may be used for specialised benchmarks. Which prediction method is the best performing method depends on which measure is being benchmarked. The OCTOPUS membrane helix prediction method is consistently one of the highest performing methods across all measures in the benchmarks that we performed.
Conclusions
The benchmark server allows general and specialised assessment of existing and novel membrane helix prediction methods. Users can employ this benchmark server to determine the most suitable method for the type of prediction the user needs to perform, be it general whole-genome annotation or the prediction of specific types of helical membrane protein. Creators of novel prediction methods can use this benchmark server to evaluate the performance of their new methods. The benchmark server will be a valuable tool for researchers seeking to extract more sophisticated information from the large and growing protein sequence databases.
Springer
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