Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.

Caspases are enzymes belonging to a conserved family of cysteine-dependent aspartic-specific proteases that are involved in vital cellular processes and play a prominent role in apoptosis and inflammation. Determining all relevant protein substrates of caspases remains a challenging task. Over 1500...

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Main Authors: Sonu Kumar, Bram J van Raam, Guy S Salvesen, Piotr Cieplak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4201543?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-eeb516c3415f4759a3f01b3e8e6311b32020-11-24T20:51:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e11053910.1371/journal.pone.0110539Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.Sonu KumarBram J van RaamGuy S SalvesenPiotr CieplakCaspases are enzymes belonging to a conserved family of cysteine-dependent aspartic-specific proteases that are involved in vital cellular processes and play a prominent role in apoptosis and inflammation. Determining all relevant protein substrates of caspases remains a challenging task. Over 1500 caspase substrates have been discovered in the human proteome according to published data and new substrates are discovered on a daily basis. To aid the discovery process we developed a caspase cleavage prediction method using the recently published curated MerCASBA database of experimentally determined caspase substrates and a Random Forest classification method. On both internal and external test sets, the ranking of predicted cleavage positions is superior to all previously developed prediction methods. The in silico predicted caspase cleavage positions in human proteins are available from a relational database: CaspDB. Our database provides information about potential cleavage sites in a verified set of all human proteins collected in Uniprot and their orthologs, allowing for tracing of cleavage motif conservation. It also provides information about the positions of disease-annotated single nucleotide polymorphisms, and posttranslational modifications that may modulate the caspase cleaving efficiency.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4201543?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sonu Kumar
Bram J van Raam
Guy S Salvesen
Piotr Cieplak
spellingShingle Sonu Kumar
Bram J van Raam
Guy S Salvesen
Piotr Cieplak
Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sonu Kumar
Bram J van Raam
Guy S Salvesen
Piotr Cieplak
author_sort Sonu Kumar
title Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.
title_short Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.
title_full Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.
title_fullStr Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.
title_full_unstemmed Caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: CaspDB, a database of predicted substrates.
title_sort caspase cleavage sites in the human proteome: caspdb, a database of predicted substrates.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Caspases are enzymes belonging to a conserved family of cysteine-dependent aspartic-specific proteases that are involved in vital cellular processes and play a prominent role in apoptosis and inflammation. Determining all relevant protein substrates of caspases remains a challenging task. Over 1500 caspase substrates have been discovered in the human proteome according to published data and new substrates are discovered on a daily basis. To aid the discovery process we developed a caspase cleavage prediction method using the recently published curated MerCASBA database of experimentally determined caspase substrates and a Random Forest classification method. On both internal and external test sets, the ranking of predicted cleavage positions is superior to all previously developed prediction methods. The in silico predicted caspase cleavage positions in human proteins are available from a relational database: CaspDB. Our database provides information about potential cleavage sites in a verified set of all human proteins collected in Uniprot and their orthologs, allowing for tracing of cleavage motif conservation. It also provides information about the positions of disease-annotated single nucleotide polymorphisms, and posttranslational modifications that may modulate the caspase cleaving efficiency.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4201543?pdf=render
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AT guyssalvesen caspasecleavagesitesinthehumanproteomecaspdbadatabaseofpredictedsubstrates
AT piotrcieplak caspasecleavagesitesinthehumanproteomecaspdbadatabaseofpredictedsubstrates
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