Author:
Ruperti Fabian,Papadopoulos Nikolaos,Musser Jacob M.,Mirdita Milot,Steinegger Martin,Arendt Detlev
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Protein annotation is a major goal in molecular biology, yet experimentally determined knowledge is typically limited to a few model organisms. In non-model species, the sequence-based prediction of gene orthology can be used to infer protein identity; however, this approach loses predictive power at longer evolutionary distances. Here we propose a workflow for protein annotation using structural similarity, exploiting the fact that similar protein structures often reflect homology and are more conserved than protein sequences.
Results
We propose a workflow of openly available tools for the functional annotation of proteins via structural similarity (MorF: MorphologFinder) and use it to annotate the complete proteome of a sponge. Sponges are highly relevant for inferring the early history of animals, yet their proteomes remain sparsely annotated. MorF accurately predicts the functions of proteins with known homology in $${>}90\%$$
>
90
%
cases and annotates an additional $$50\%$$
50
%
of the proteome beyond standard sequence-based methods. We uncover new functions for sponge cell types, including extensive FGF, TGF, and Ephrin signaling in sponge epithelia, and redox metabolism and control in myopeptidocytes. Notably, we also annotate genes specific to the enigmatic sponge mesocytes, proposing they function to digest cell walls.
Conclusions
Our work demonstrates that structural similarity is a powerful approach that complements and extends sequence similarity searches to identify homologous proteins over long evolutionary distances. We anticipate this will be a powerful approach that boosts discovery in numerous -omics datasets, especially for non-model organisms.
Funder
H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions
National Research Foundation of Korea
H2020 European Research Council
European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL)
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
10 articles.
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