Back to Search Start Over

Assessment of methods for predicting the effects of PTEN and TPMT protein variants

Authors :
Lukas Folkman
Kunal Kundu
Yaoqi Zhou
Rita Casadio
Olivier Lichtarge
Yana Bromberg
Giulia Babbi
Yizhou Yin
Lipika R. Pal
Panagiotis Katsonis
Castrense Savojardo
Predrag Radivojac
Maximilian Miller
John Moult
Pier Luigi Martelli
Vikas Pejaver
Pejaver V.
Babbi G.
Casadio R.
Folkman L.
Katsonis P.
Kundu K.
Lichtarge O.
Martelli P.L.
Miller M.
Moult J.
Pal L.R.
Savojardo C.
Yin Y.
Zhou Y.
Radivojac P.
Bromberg Y.
Source :
Hum Mutat
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Thermodynamic stability is a fundamental property shared by all proteins. Changes in stability due to mutation are a widespread molecular mechanism in genetic diseases. Methods for the prediction of mutation-induced stability change have typically been developed and evaluated on incomplete and/or biased data sets. As part of the Critical Assessment of Genome Interpretation (CAGI), we explored the utility of high-throughput variant stability profiling (VSP) assay data as an alternative for the assessment of computational methods and evaluated state-of-the-art predictors against over 7,000 non-synonymous variants from two proteins. We found that predictions were modestly correlated with actual experimental values. Predictors fared better when evaluated as classifiers of extreme stability effects. While different methods emerged as top-performers depending on the metric, it is non-trivial to draw conclusions on their adoption or improvement. Our analyses revealed that only 16% of all variants in VSP assays could be confidently defined as stability-affecting. Furthermore, it is unclear to what extent VSP abundance scores were reasonable proxies for the stability-related quantities that participating methods were designed to predict. Overall, our observations underscore the need for clearly defined objectives when developing and using both computational and experimental methods in the context of measuring variant impact.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hum Mutat
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72626da137ea3a3834f2c4b27cd1fc6d