WebMetabase: Cleavage sites analysis tool for natural and unnatural substrates from diverse data source

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Abstract

More than 150 peptide therapeutics are globally in clinical development. Many enzymatic barriers should be crossed by a successful drug to be prosperous in such a process. Therefore, the new peptide drugs must be designed preventing the potential protease cleavage to make the compound less susceptible to protease reaction. We present a new data analysis tool developed in WebMetabase, an approach that stores the information from liquid chromatography mass spectrometry-based experimental data or from external sources such as the MEROPS database. The tool is a chemically aware system where each peptide substrate is presented as a sequence of structural blocks (SBs) connected by amide bonds and not being limited to the natural amino acids. Each SB is characterized by its pharmacophoric and physicochemical properties including a similarity score that describes likelihood between a SB and each one of the other SBs in the database. This methodology can be used to perform a frequency analysis to discover the most frequent cleavage sites for similar amide bonds, defined based on the similarity of the SB that participate in such a bond within the experimentally derived and/or public database.

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Radchenko, T., Fontaine, F., Morettoni, L., & Zamora, I. (2019). WebMetabase: Cleavage sites analysis tool for natural and unnatural substrates from diverse data source. Bioinformatics, 35(4), 650–655. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bty667

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