The low complexity of minimotif patterns results in a high false-positive prediction rate, hampering protein function prediction. A multi-filter algorithm, trained and tested on a linear regression model, support vector machine model, and neural network model, using a large dataset of verified minimotifs, vastly improves minimotif prediction accuracy while generating few false positives. An optimal threshold for the best accuracy reaches an overall accuracy above 90%, while a stringent threshold for the best specificity generates less than 1% false positives or even no false positives and still produces more than 90% true positives for the linear regression and neural network models. The minimotif multi-filter with its excellent accuracy represents the state-of-the-art in minimotif prediction and is expected to be very useful to biologists investigating protein function and how missense mutations cause disease. © 2012 Mi et al.
CITATION STYLE
Mi, T., Rajasekaran, S., Merlin, J. C., Gryk, M., & Schiller, M. R. (2012). Achieving High Accuracy Prediction of Minimotifs. PLoS ONE, 7(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045589
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