Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

MoMo: discovery of statistically significant post-translational modification motifs

2018; Oxford University Press; Volume: 35; Issue: 16 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/bioinformatics/bty1058

ISSN

1367-4811

Autores

Alice Cheng, Charles E. Grant, William Stafford Noble, Timothy L. Bailey,

Tópico(s)

RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms

Resumo

Post-translational modifications (PTMs) of proteins are associated with many significant biological functions and can be identified in high throughput using tandem mass spectrometry. Many PTMs are associated with short sequence patterns called 'motifs' that help localize the modifying enzyme. Accordingly, many algorithms have been designed to identify these motifs from mass spectrometry data. Accurate statistical confidence estimates for discovered motifs are critically important for proper interpretation and in the design of downstream experimental validation.We describe a method for assigning statistical confidence estimates to PTM motifs, and we demonstrate that this method provides accurate P-values on both simulated and real data. Our methods are implemented in MoMo, a software tool for discovering motifs among sets of PTMs that we make available as a web server and as downloadable source code. MoMo re-implements the two most widely used PTM motif discovery algorithms-motif-x and MoDL-while offering many enhancements. Relative to motif-x, MoMo offers improved statistical confidence estimates and more accurate calculation of motif scores. The MoMo web server offers more proteome databases, more input formats, larger inputs and longer running times than the motif-x web server. Finally, our study demonstrates that the confidence estimates produced by motif-x are inaccurate. This inaccuracy stems in part from the common practice of drawing 'background' peptides from an unshuffled proteome database. Our results thus suggest that many of the papers that use motif-x to find motifs may be reporting results that lack statistical support.The MoMo web server and source code are provided at http://meme-suite.org.Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

Referência(s)