Functionathon: a manual data mining workflow to generate functional hypotheses for uncharacterized human proteins and its application by undergraduate students

Author:

Duek Paula12,Mary Camille2,Zahn-Zabal Monique1,Bairoch Amos12,Lane Lydie12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CALIPHO group, SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

2. Department of microbiology and molecular medicine, Faculty of medicine, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract About 10% of human proteins have no annotated function in protein knowledge bases. A workflow to generate hypotheses for the function of these uncharacterized proteins has been developed, based on predicted and experimental information on protein properties, interactions, tissular expression, subcellular localization, conservation in other organisms, as well as phenotypic data in mutant model organisms. This workflow has been applied to seven uncharacterized human proteins (C6orf118, C7orf25, CXorf58, RSRP1, SMLR1, TMEM53 and TMEM232) in the frame of a course-based undergraduate research experience named Functionathon organized at the University of Geneva to teach undergraduate students how to use biological databases and bioinformatics tools and interpret the results. C6orf118, CXorf58 and TMEM232 were proposed to be involved in cilia-related functions; TMEM53 and SMLR1 were proposed to be involved in lipid metabolism and C7orf25 and RSRP1 were proposed to be involved in RNA metabolism and gene expression. Experimental strategies to test these hypotheses were also discussed. The results of this manual data mining study may contribute to the project recently launched by the Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) Human Proteome Project aiming to fill gaps in the functional annotation of human proteins. Database URL: http://www.nextprot.org

Funder

Université de Genève

SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Information Systems

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