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ABSTRACT: Motivation
Nucleo-cytoplasmic trafficking of proteins is a core regulatory process that sustains the integrity of the nuclear space of eukaryotic cells via an interplay between numerous factors. Despite progress on experimentally characterizing a number of nuclear localization signals, their presence alone remains an unreliable indicator of actual translocation.Results
This article introduces a probabilistic model that explicitly recognizes a variety of nuclear localization signals, and integrates relevant amino acid sequence and interaction data for any candidate nuclear protein. In particular, we develop and incorporate scoring functions based on distinct classes of classical nuclear localization signals. Our empirical results show that the model accurately predicts whether a protein is imported into the nucleus, surpassing the classification accuracy of similar predictors when evaluated on the mouse and yeast proteomes (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of 0.84 and 0.80, respectively). The model also predicts the sequence position of a nuclear localization signal and whether it interacts with importin-?.Availability
http://pprowler.itee.uq.edu.au/NucImport
SUBMITTER: Mehdi AM
PROVIDER: S-EPMC6559714 | biostudies-literature | 2011 May
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Mehdi Ahmed M AM Sehgal Muhammad Shoaib B MS Kobe Bostjan B Bailey Timothy L TL Bodén Mikael M
Bioinformatics (Oxford, England) 20110303 9
<h4>Motivation</h4>Nucleo-cytoplasmic trafficking of proteins is a core regulatory process that sustains the integrity of the nuclear space of eukaryotic cells via an interplay between numerous factors. Despite progress on experimentally characterizing a number of nuclear localization signals, their presence alone remains an unreliable indicator of actual translocation.<h4>Results</h4>This article introduces a probabilistic model that explicitly recognizes a variety of nuclear localization signa ...[more]