Significant non-existence of sequences in genomes and proteomes

Author:

Koulouras Grigorios1ORCID,Frith Martin C123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Artificial Intelligence Research Center, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), 2-3-26 Aomi, Koto-ku, Tokyo 135-0064, Japan

2. Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo, Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan

3. Computational Bio Big-Data Open Innovation Laboratory (CBBD-OIL), AIST, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Minimal absent words (MAWs) are minimal-length oligomers absent from a genome or proteome. Although some artificially synthesized MAWs have deleterious effects, there is still a lack of a strategy for the classification of non-occurring sequences as potentially malicious or benign. In this work, by using Markovian models with multiple-testing correction, we reveal significant absent oligomers, which are statistically expected to exist. This suggests that their absence is due to negative selection. We survey genomes and proteomes covering the diversity of life and find thousands of significant absent sequences. Common significant MAWs are often mono- or dinucleotide tracts, or palindromic. Significant viral MAWs are often restriction sites and may indicate unknown restriction motifs. Surprisingly, significant mammal genome MAWs are often present, but rare, in other mammals, suggesting that they are suppressed but not completely forbidden. Significant human MAWs are frequently present in prokaryotes, suggesting immune function, but rarely present in human viruses, indicating viral mimicry of the host. More than one-fourth of human proteins are one substitution away from containing a significant MAW, with the majority of replacements being predicted harmful. We provide a web-based, interactive database of significant MAWs across genomes and proteomes.

Funder

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

Reference89 articles.

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