4.7 Article

HP-Lattice QSAR for dynein proteins:: Experimental proteomics (2D-electrophoresis, mass spectrometry) and theoretic study of a Leishmania infantum sequence

Journal

BIOORGANIC & MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 16, Issue 16, Pages 7770-7776

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2008.07.023

Keywords

QSAR; spectral moments; HP-Lattice model; complex networks; sequence alignment; BLAST; mass spectrometry; 2D-electrophoresis; Leishmania infantum; parasites proteomics; dyneins

Funding

  1. Comunidad Autononoma de Madrid [08.3/0019.1/2001]
  2. Program Isidro Parga Pondal of the Xunta de Galicia
  3. Xunta de Galicia and European Union (F.S.E.) [IN809A 2007/84-0]

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The toxicity and inefficacy of actual organic drugs against Leishmaniosis justify research projects to find new molecular targets in Leishmania species including Leishmania infantum ( L. infantum) and Leishmania major (L. major), both important pathogens. In this sense, quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) methods, which are very useful in Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry to discover small-sized drugs, may help to identify not only new drugs but also new drug targets, if we apply them to proteins. Dyneins are important proteins of these parasites governing fundamental processes such as cilia and flagella motion, nuclear migration, organization of the mitotic splinde, and chromosome separation during mitosis. However, despite the interest for them as potential drug targets, so far there has been no report whatsoever on dyneins with QSAR techniques. To the best of our knowledge, we report here the first QSAR for dynein proteins. We used as input the Spectral Moments of a Markov matrix associated to the HP-Lattice Network of the protein sequence. The data contain 411 protein sequences of different species selected by ClustalX to develop a QSAR that correctly discriminates on average between 92.75% and 92.51% of dyneins and other proteins in four different train and cross-validation datasets. We also report a combined experimental and theoretic study of a new dynein sequence in order to illustrate the utility of the model to search for potential drug targets with a practical example. First, we carried out a 2D-electrophoresis analysis of L. infantum biological samples. Next, we excised from 2D-E gels one spot of interest belonging to an unknown protein or protein fragment in the region M < 20,200 and pI < 4. We used MASCOT search engine to find proteins in the L. major data base with the highest similarity score to the MS of the protein isolated from L. infantum. We used the QSAR model to predict the new sequence as dynein with probability of 99.99% without relying upon alignment. In order to confirm the previous function annotation we predicted the sequences as dynein with BLAST and the omniBLAST tools (96% alignment similarity to dyneins of other species). Using this combined strategy, we have successfully identified L. infantum protein containing dynein heavy chain, and illustrated the potential use of the QSAR model as a complement to alignment tools. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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