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Protein Sequence Databases

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Title: Protein Sequence Databases


1
Protein Sequence Databases
  • Nathan Edwards
  • Department of Biochemistry and Mol. Cell.
    Biology
  • Georgetown University Medical Center

2
Protein Sequence Databases
  • Link between mass spectra and proteins
  • A proteins amino-acid sequence provides a basis
    for interpreting
  • Enzymatic digestion
  • Separation protocols
  • Fragmentation
  • Peptide ion masses
  • We must interpret database information as
    carefully as mass spectra.

3
More than sequence
  • Protein sequence databases provide much more than
    sequence
  • Names
  • Descriptions
  • Facts
  • Predictions
  • Links to other information sources
  • Protein databases provide a link to the current
    state of our understanding about a protein.

4
Much more than sequence
  • Names
  • Accession, Name, Description
  • Biological Source
  • Organism, Source, Taxonomy
  • Literature
  • Function
  • Biological process, molecular function, cellular
    component
  • Known and predicted
  • Features
  • Polymorphism, Isoforms, PTMs, Domains
  • Derived Data
  • Molecular weight, pI

5
Database types
Curated Swiss-Prot UniProt RefSeq NP Translated TrEMBL RefSeq XP, ZP
Omnibus NCBIs nr MSDB IPI Other PDB HPRD EST Genomic
6
SwissProt
  • From ExPASy
  • Expert Protein Analysis System
  • Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics
  • 515,000 protein sequence entries
  • 12,000 species represented
  • 20,000 Human proteins
  • Highly curated
  • Minimal redundancy
  • Part of UniProt Consortium

7
TrEMBL
  • Translated EMBL nucleotide sequences
  • European Molecular Biology Laboratory
  • European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI)
  • Computer annotated
  • Only sequences absent from SwissProt
  • 10.5 M protein sequence entries
  • 230,000 species
  • 75,000 Human proteins
  • Part of UniProt Consortium

8
UniProt
  • Universal Protein Resource
  • Combination of sequences from
  • Swiss-Prot
  • TrEMBL
  • Mixture of highly curated (Swiss-Prot) and
    computer annotation (TrEMBL)
  • Similar sequence clusters are available
  • 50, 90, 100 sequence similarity

9
RefSeq
  • Reference Sequence
  • From NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology
    Information), NLM, NIH
  • Integrated genomic, transcript, and protein
    sequences.
  • Varying levels of curation
  • Reviewed, Validated, , Predicted,
  • 9.7 M protein sequence entries
  • 209,000 reviewed, 90,000 validated
  • 39,000 Human proteins

10
RefSeq
  • Particular focus on major research organisms
  • Tightly integrated with genome projects.
  • Curated entries NP accessions
  • Predicted entries XP accessions
  • Others YP, ZP, AP

11
IPI
  • International Protein Index
  • From EBI
  • For a specific species, combines
  • UniProt, RefSeq, Ensembl
  • Species specific databases
  • HInv-DB, VEGA, TAIR
  • 87,000 (from 307,000 ) human protein sequence
    entries
  • Human, mouse, rat, zebra fish, arabidopsis,
    chicken, cow

12
MSDB
  • From the Imperial College (London)
  • Combines
  • PIR, TrEMBL, GenBank, SwissProt
  • Distributed with Mascot
  • so well integrated with Mascot
  • 3.2M protein sequence entries
  • Similar sequences suppressed
  • 100 sequence similarity
  • Not updated since September 2006 (obsolete)

13
NCBIs nr
  • non-redundant
  • Contains
  • GenBank CDS translations
  • RefSeq Proteins
  • Protein Data Bank (PDB)
  • SwissProt, TrEMBL, PIR
  • Others
  • Similar sequences suppressed
  • 100 sequence similarity
  • 10.5 M protein sequence entries

14
Others
  • HPRD
  • Manually curated integration of literature
  • PDB
  • Focus on protein structure
  • dbEST
  • Part of GenBank - EST sequences
  • Genome Sequences

15
Human Sequences
  • Number of Human genes is believed to be between
    20,000 and 25,000

SwissProt 20,000
RefSeq 39,000
TrEMBL 75,000
IPI-HUMAN 87,000
MSDB 130,000
nr 230,000
16
DNA to Protein Sequence
Derived from http//online.itp.ucsb.edu/online/inf
obio01/burge
17
Genome Browsers
  • Link genomic, transcript, and protein sequence in
    a graphical manner
  • Genes, ESTs, SNPs, cross-species, etc.
  • UC Santa Cruz
  • http//genome.ucsc.edu
  • Ensembl
  • http//www.ensembl.org
  • NCBI Map View
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mapview

18
UCSC Genome Browser
  • Shows many sources of protein sequence evidence
    in a unified display

19
PeptideMapper Web Service
Im Feeling Lucky
20
PeptideMapper Web Service
Im Feeling Lucky
21
Unannotated Splice Isoform
22
Accessions
  • Permanent labels
  • Short, machine readable
  • Enable precise communication
  • Typos render them unusable!
  • Each database uses a different format
  • Swiss-Prot P17947
  • Ensembl ENSG00000066336
  • PIR S60367 S60367
  • GO GO0003700

23
Names / IDs
  • Compact mnemonic labels
  • Not guaranteed permanent
  • Require careful curation
  • Conceptual objects
  • ALBU_HUMAN
  • Serum Albumin
  • RT30_HUMAN
  • Mitochondrial 28S ribosomal protein S30
  • CP3A7_HUMAN
  • Cytochrome P450 3A7

24
Description / Name
  • Free text description
  • Human readable
  • Space limited
  • Hard for computers to interpret!
  • No standard nomenclature or format
  • Often abused.
  • COX7R_HUMAN
  • Cytochrome c oxidase subunit VIIa-related
    protein, mitochondrial Precursor

25
FASTA Format
26
FASTA Format
  • gt
  • Accession number
  • No uniform format
  • Multiple accessions separated by
  • One line of description
  • Usually pretty cryptic
  • Organism of sequence?
  • No uniform format
  • Official latin name not necessarily used
  • Amino-acid sequence in single-letter code
  • Usually spread over multiple lines.

27
Organism / Species / Taxonomy
  • The proteins organism
  • or the source of the biological sample
  • The most reliable sequence annotation available
  • Useful only to the extent that it is correct
  • NCBIs taxonomy is widely used
  • Provides a standard of sorts Heirachical
  • Other databases dont necessarily keep up
  • Organism specific sequence databases starting to
    become available.

28
Organism / Species / Taxonomy
  • Buffalo rat
  • Gunn rats
  • Norway rat
  • Rattus PC12 clone IS
  • Rattus norvegicus
  • Rattus norvegicus8
  • Rattus norwegicus
  • Rattus rattiscus
  • Rattus sp.
  • Rattus sp. strain Wistar
  • Sprague-Dawley rat
  • Wistar rats
  • brown rat
  • laboratory rat
  • rat
  • rats
  • zitter rats

29
Controlled Vocabulary
  • Middle ground between computers and people
  • Provides precision for concepts
  • Searching, sorting, browsing
  • Concept relationships
  • Vocabulary / Ontology must be established
  • Human curation
  • Link between concept and object
  • Manually curated
  • Automatic / Predicted

30
Controlled Vocabulary
31
Controlled Vocabulary
32
Controlled Vocabulary
33
Controlled Vocabulary
34
Controlled Vocabulary
35
Controlled Vocabulary
36
Controlled Vocabulary
37
Controlled Vocabulary
38
Controlled Vocabulary
39
Controlled Vocabulary
40
Controlled Vocabulary
41
Controlled Vocabulary
42
Controlled Vocabulary
43
Controlled Vocabulary
44
Ontology Structure
  • NCBI Taxonomy
  • Tree
  • Gene Ontology (GO)
  • Molecular function
  • Biological process
  • Cellular component
  • Directed, Acyclic Graph (DAG)
  • Unstructured labels
  • Overlapping?

45
Ontology Structure
46
Protein Families
  • Similar sequence implies similar function
  • Similar structure implies similar function
  • Common domains imply similar function
  • Bootstrap up from small sets of proteins with
    well understood characteristics
  • Usually a hybrid manual / automatic approach

47
Protein Families
48
Protein Families
49
Protein Families
  • PROSITE, PFam, InterPro, PRINTS
  • Swiss-Prot keywords
  • Differences
  • Motif style, ontology structure, degree of manual
    curation
  • Similarities
  • Primarily sequence based, cross species

50
Gene Ontology
  • Hierarchical
  • Molecular function
  • Biological process
  • Cellular component
  • Describes the vocabulary only!
  • Protein families provide GO association
  • Not necessarily any appropriate GO category.
  • Not necessarily in all three hierarchies.
  • Sometimes general categories are used because
    none of the specific categories are correct.

51
Protein Family / Gene Ontology
52
Sequence Variants
  • Protein sequence can vary due to
  • Polymorphism
  • Alternative splicing
  • Post-translational modification
  • Sequence databases typically do not capture all
    versions of a proteins sequence

53
Sequence Variants
  • Swiss-Prot a curated protein sequence database
    which strives to provide a high level of
    annotation (such as the description of the
    function of a protein, its domains structure,
    post-translational modifications, variants,
    etc.), a minimal level of redundancy and high
    level of integration with other databases
  • - Swiss-Prot web site front page

54
Sequence Variants
  • b) Minimal redundancy
  • Many sequence databases contain, for a given
    protein sequence, separate entries which
    correspond to different literature reports. In
    Swiss-Prot we try as much as possible to merge
    all these data so as to minimize the redundancy
    of the database. If conflicts exist between
    various sequencing reports, they are indicated in
    the feature table of the corresponding entry.
  • - Swiss-Prot User Manual, Section 1.1

55
Sequence Variants
  • IPI provides a top level guide to the main
    databases that describe the proteomes of higher
    eukaryotic organisms. IPI
  • 1. effectively maintains a database of cross
    references between the primary data sources
  • 2. provides minimally redundant yet maximally
    complete sets of proteins for featured species
    (one sequence per transcript)
  • 3. maintains stable identifiers (with
    incremental versioning) to allow the tracking of
    sequences in IPI between IPI releases.
  • - IPI web site front page

56
Swiss-Prot Variant Annotations
57
Swiss-Prot Variant Annotations
58
Swiss-Prot Variant Annotations
59
Peptides to Proteins
Nesvizhskii et al., Anal. Chem. 2003
60
Peptides to Proteins
61
Peptides to Proteins
  • A peptide sequence may occur in many different
    protein sequences
  • Variants, paralogues, protein families
  • Separation, digestion and ionization is not well
    understood
  • Proteins in sequence database are extremely
    non-random, and very dependent

62
Omnibus Database Redundancy Elimination
  • Source databases often contain the same sequences
    with different descriptions
  • Omnibus databases keep one copy of the sequence,
    and
  • An arbitrary description, or
  • All descriptions, or
  • Particular description, based on source
    preference
  • Good definitions can be lost, including taxonomy

63
Description Elimination
  • gi12053249embCAB66806.1 hypothetical protein
    Homo sapiens
  • gi46255828gbAAH68998.1 COMMD4 protein Homo
    sapiens
  • gi42632621gbAAS22242.1 COMMD4 Homo
    sapiens
  • gi21361661refNP_060298.2 COMM domain
    containing 4 Homo sapiens
  • gi51316094spQ9H0A8COM4_HUMAN COMM domain
    containing protein 4
  • gi49065330embCAG38483.1 COMMD4 Homo
    sapiens

64
Description Elimination
  • gi2947219gbAAC39645.1 UDP-galactose 4'
    epimerase Homo sapiens
  • gi1119217gbAAB86498.1 UDP-galactose-4-epimera
    se Homo sapiens
  • gi14277913pdb1HZJB Chain B, Human
    Udp-Galactose 4-Epimerase Accommodation Of
    Udp-N- Acetylglucosamine Within The Active Site
  • gi14277912pdb1HZJA Chain A, Human
    Udp-Galactose 4-Epimerase Accommodation Of
    Udp-N- Acetylglucosamine Within The Active Site
  • gi2494659spQ14376GALE_HUMAN UDP-glucose
    4-epimerase (Galactowaldenase) (UDP-galactose
    4-epimerase)
  • gi1585500prf2201313AUDP galactose
    4'-epimerase

65
Description Elimination
  • gi4261710gbAAD14010.1 chlordecone reductase
    Homo sapiens
  • gi2117443pirA57407 chlordecone reductase (EC
    1.1.1.225) / 3alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
    (EC 1.1.1.-) I validated human
  • gi1839264gbAAB47003.1 HAKRa
    product/3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
    homolog human, liver, Peptide, 323 aa
  • gi1705823spP17516AKC4_HUMAN Aldo-keto
    reductase family 1 member C4 (Chlordecone reductas
    e) (CDR) (3-alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase)
    (3-alpha-HSD) (Dihydrodiol dehydrogenase 4) (DD4)
    (HAKRA)
  • gi7328948dbjBAA92885.1 dihydrodiol
    dehydrogenase 4 Homo sapiens
  • gi7328971dbjBAA92893.1dihydrodiol
    dehydrogenase 4 Homo sapiens

66
Summary
  • Protein sequence databases should be interpreted
    with as much care as mass spectra
  • Protein sequences come from genes
  • Use controlled vocabularies
  • Understand the structure of ontologies
  • Take advantage of computational predictions
  • Look for sequence variants
  • Peptides to proteins not as simple as it seems
  • Be careful with omnibus databases
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