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PoPS: a computational tool for modeling and predicting protease specificity
Boyd, S.E.   de la Banda, M.G.   Pike, R.N.   Whisstock, J.C.   Rudy, G.B.  
Sch. of Comput. Sci. & Software Eng., Monash Univ., Melbourne, Vic., Australia;

This paper appears in: Computational Systems Bioinformatics Conference, 2004. CSB 2004. Proceedings. 2004 IEEE
Publication Date: 16-19 Aug. 2004
On page(s): 372- 381
ISSN:
ISBN: 0-7695-2194-0
INSPEC Accession Number: 8199844
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/CSB.2004.1332450
Current Version Published: 2004-10-08

Abstract
Proteases play a fundamental role in the control of intra- and extracellular processes by binding and cleaving specific amino acid sequences. Identifying these targets is extremely challenging. Current computational attempts to predict cleavage sites are limited, representing these amino acid sequences as patterns or frequency matrices. Here we present PoPS, a publicly accessible bioinformatics tool (http://pops.csse.monash.edu.au/) which provides a novel method for building computational models of protease specificity that, while still being based on these amino acid sequences, can be built from any experimental data or expert knowledge available to the user. PoPS specificity models can be used to predict and rank likely cleavages within a single substrate, and within entire proteomes. Other factors, such as the secondary or tertiary structure of the substrate, can be used to screen unlikely sites. Furthermore, the tool also provides facilities to infer, compare and test models, and to store them in a publicly accessible database.

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