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Bioinformatics Advance Access originally published online on September 17, 2007
Bioinformatics 2007 23(21):2816-2822; doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btm436
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

A novel knowledge-based approach to design inorganic-binding peptides

Ersin Emre Oren 1,2, Candan Tamerler 3, Deniz Sahin 1,3, Marketa Hnilova 1, Urartu Ozgur Safak Seker 1,3, Mehmet Sarikaya 1,* and Ram Samudrala 2,*

1Materials Science and Engineering Department, 2Department of Microbiology, Computational Genomics Group, University of Washington, Seattle, USA and 3Molecular Biology and Genetics, Istanbul Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey

*To whom correspondence should be addressed.


   Abstract

Motivation: The discovery of solid-binding peptide sequences is accelerating along with their practical applications in biotechnology and materials sciences. A better understanding of the relationships between the peptide sequences and their binding affinities or specificities will enable further design of novel peptides with selected properties of interest both in engineering and medicine.

Results: A bioinformatics approach was developed to classify peptides selected by in vivo techniques according to their inorganic solid-binding properties. Our approach performs all-against-all comparisons of experimentally selected peptides with short amino acid sequences that were categorized for their binding affinity and scores the alignments using sequence similarity scoring matrices. We generated novel scoring matrices that optimize the similarities within the strong-binding peptide sequences and the differences between the strong- and weak-binding peptide sequences. Using the scoring matrices thus generated, a given peptide is classified based on the sequence similarity to a set of experimentally selected peptides. We demonstrate the new approach by classifying experimentally characterized quartz-binding peptides and computationally designing new sequences with specific affinities. Experimental verifications of binding of these computationally designed peptides confirm our predictions with high accuracy. We further show that our approach is a general one and can be used to design new sequences that bind to a given inorganic solid with predictable and enhanced affinity.

Contact: sarikaya{at}u.washington.edu or ram{at}compbio.washington.edu

Supplementary information: Supplementary Material containing, the quartz-binding peptide sequences, additional results and the specific scoring matrices are available at Bioinformatics online.

Associate Editor: Keith Crandall


Received on June 6, 2007; revised on August 1, 2007; accepted on August 16, 2007

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