Prediction of carbohydrate-binding proteins from sequences using support vector machines

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Abstract

Carbohydrate-binding proteins are proteins that can interact with sugar chains but do not modify them. They are involved in many physiological functions, and we have developed a method for predicting them from their amino acid sequences. Our method is based on support vector machines (SVMs). We first clarified the definition of carbohydrate-binding proteins and then constructed positive and negative datasets with which the SVMs were trained. By applying the leave-one-out test to these datasets, our method delivered 0.92 of the area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve. We also examined two amino acid grouping methods that enable effective learning of sequence patterns and evaluated the performance of these methods. When we applied our method in combination with the homology-based prediction method to the annotated human genome database, H-invDB, we found that the true positive rate of prediction was improved. © 2010 Seizi Someya et al.

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Shimizu, K., Someya, S., Kakuta, M., Morita, M., Sumikoshi, K., Cao, W., … Terada, T. (2010). Prediction of carbohydrate-binding proteins from sequences using support vector machines. Advances in Bioinformatics, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/289301

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