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The COMBREX project: design, methodology, and initial results

Authors :
Kimmen Sjölander
Jyotsna Guleria
Donald J. Ferguson
Giovanni Gadda
John F. Hunt
Almaz Maksad
Maria Jesus Martin
Revonda M. Pokrzywa
Charles DeLisi
Linda Columbus
David Horn
John Tate
Dieter Söll
Rajeswari Swaminathan
Jeffrey H Miller
Lina L. Faller
Alexander F. Yakunin
Bernhard O. Palsson
Martin Steffen
Granger G. Sutton
Daniel Segrè
Kenneth E. Rudd
Krista Rochussen
Peter D. Karp
Mark G. McGettrick
Alexey Fomenkov
Han-Pil Choi
Ramana Madupu
Robert Blumenthal
Manuel Ferrer
Jim C. Spain
Claire O'Donovan
Russell Greiner
J. Martin Bollinger
Ami Levy-Moonshine
Richard J. Roberts
William Klimke
Shuang-yong Xu
Kevin R. Tao
Yi Chien Chang
Caitlin Monahan
Julien Gobeill
Germán Plata
Varun Mazumdar
Aaron T. Setterdahl
Dmitri Tchigvintsev
Genevieve Housman
Jie Hu
John Rachlin
Woo Suk Chang
Ashok S. Bhagwat
Michael Y. Galperin
Irina A. Rodionova
Zhenjun Hu
Lais Osmani
Carsten Krebs
Dennis Vitkup
Brian P. Anton
Daniel H. Haft
Iddo Friedberg
Simon Kasif
Steven E. Brenner
Steven L. Salzberg
Stanley Letovsky
Niels Klitgord
Dana Macelis
Alex Bateman
Richard D. Morgan
Peter Brown
Valérie de Crécy-Lagard
Andrei L. Osterman
Benjamin L. Allen
Dmitry A. Rodionov
Patrick Ruch
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (US)
Source :
PLoS Biology, Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname, PLoS Biology, Vol 11, Iss 8, p e1001638 (2013)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

© 2013 Brian P. et al.<br />Prior to the “genomic era,” when the acquisition of DNA sequence involved significant labor and expense, the sequencing of genes was strongly linked to the experimental characterization of their products. Sequencing at that time directly resulted from the need to understand an experimentally determined phenotype or biochemical activity. Now that DNA sequencing has become orders of magnitude faster and less expensive, focus has shifted to sequencing entire genomes. Since biochemistry and genetics have not, by and large, enjoyed the same improvement of scale, public sequence repositories now predominantly contain putative protein sequences for which there is no direct experimental evidence of function. Computational approaches attempt to leverage evidence associated with the ever-smaller fraction of experimentally analyzed proteins to predict function for these putative proteins. Maximizing our understanding of function over the universe of proteins in toto requires not only robust computational methods of inference but also a judicious allocation of experimental resources, focusing on proteins whose experimental characterization will maximize the number and accuracy of follow-on predictions.<br />COMBREX is funded by a GO grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) (1RC2GM092602-01).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS Biology, Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname, PLoS Biology, Vol 11, Iss 8, p e1001638 (2013)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....14ac19c12ba81148df7af8775c6d2d4b