DocumentCode
2156321
Title
MS2DB: An Algorithmic Approach to Determine Disulfide Linkage Patterns
Author
Lee, Timothy ; Singh, Rahul ; Yen, Ten-Yang ; Macher, Bruce
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., San Francisco State Univ., CA
fYear
0
fDate
0-0 0
Firstpage
947
Lastpage
952
Abstract
Determining the number and location of disulfide bonds within a protein provide valuable insight into the protein´s three-dimensional structure. Purely computational methods that predict the bonded cysteine pairings given a protein´s primary structure have limitations in both prediction correctness and the number of bonds that can be predicted. Our approach utilizes tandem mass spectrometric (MS/MS) experimental procedures that produce spectra of protein fragments joined by a disulfide bond. This allows the limitations in correctness and scaling to be overcome. The algorithmic problem then becomes how to match a theoretical mass space of all possible bonded fragments against the MS/MS data. In our algorithm, which we call the indexed approach, the regions of the mass space that contain masses comparable to the MS/MS spectrum masses are located before the match is determined. We have developed a software package, MS2DB, which implements this approach. A performance study shows that the indexed approach determines disulfide bond linkage patterns both correctly and efficiently
Keywords
biology computing; mass spectra; mass spectroscopic chemical analysis; molecular biophysics; molecular configurations; proteins; computational methods; cysteine pairings; disulfide bonds; disulfide linkage patterns; indexed approach; protein primary structure; protein three-dimensional structure; software package MS2DB; tandem mass spectrometric data; Amino acids; Bonding; Chemistry; Computer science; Couplings; Machine learning algorithms; Mass spectroscopy; Peptides; Prediction algorithms; Proteins;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer-Based Medical Systems, 2006. CBMS 2006. 19th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Salt Lake City, UT
ISSN
1063-7125
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2517-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CBMS.2006.119
Filename
1647692
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