Skip Navigation

Nucleic Acids Research 2004 32(Web Server Issue):W400-W404; doi:10.1093/nar/gkh417
This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Print PDF (228K) Freely available
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My Personal Archive
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow Commercial Re-use Guidelines
for Open Access NAR Content
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Bagos, P. G.
Right arrow Articles by Hamodrakas, S. J.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Bagos, P. G.
Right arrow Articles by Hamodrakas, S. J.
Social Bookmarking
 Add to CiteULike   Add to Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us  
What's this?

© 2004, the authors
Nucleic Acids Research, Vol. 32, Web Server issue © Oxford University Press 2004; all rights reserved

PRED-TMBB: a web server for predicting the topology of ß-barrel outer membrane proteins

Pantelis G. Bagos*, Theodore D. Liakopoulos, Ioannis C. Spyropoulos and Stavros J. Hamodrakas

Department of Cell Biology and Biophysics, Faculty of Biology, University of Athens, Panepistimiopolis, Athens 15701, Greece

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +30 210 7274868; Fax: +30 210 7274742; Email: pbagos{at}biol.uoa.gr

Received February 15, 2004; Revised and Accepted April 2, 2004


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 THE SERVER
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
The ß-barrel outer membrane proteins constitute one of the two known structural classes of membrane proteins. Whereas there are several different web-based predictors for {alpha}-helical membrane proteins, currently there is no freely available prediction method for ß-barrel membrane proteins, at least with an acceptable level of accuracy. We present here a web server (PRED-TMBB, http://bioinformatics.biol.uoa.gr/PRED-TMBB) which is capable of predicting the transmembrane strands and the topology of ß-barrel outer membrane proteins of Gram-negative bacteria. The method is based on a Hidden Markov Model, trained according to the Conditional Maximum Likelihood criterion. The model was retrained and the training set now includes 16 non-homologous outer membrane proteins with structures known at atomic resolution. The user may submit one sequence at a time and has the option of choosing between three different decoding methods. The server reports the predicted topology of a given protein, a score indicating the probability of the protein being an outer membrane ß-barrel protein, posterior probabilities for the transmembrane strand prediction and a graphical representation of the assumed position of the transmembrane strands with respect to the lipid bilayer.


    INTRODUCTION
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 THE SERVER
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
Integral membrane proteins are divided into two distinct structural classes, the {alpha}-helical membrane proteins and the ß-barrel membrane proteins. The {alpha}-helical membrane proteins are found mostly in the cell membranes of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms, performing a variety of biologically important functions. Their membrane spanning regions form {alpha}-helices, which consist mainly of hydrophobic residues (1). A variety of computational techniques have been proposed for the prediction of the transmembrane segments of {alpha}-helical membrane proteins, with high levels of accuracy and precision. Furthermore, there are several freely accessible web servers for the prediction of {alpha}-helical membrane spanning segments. On the other hand, the members of the ß-barrel membrane protein class are located in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, and presumably in the outer membrane of chloroplasts and mitochondria. These proteins have membrane spanning segments formed by antiparallel ß-strands, creating a channel in the form of a barrel that spans the outer membrane (2). It is of great importance to possess powerful, freely available tools to predict the transmembrane topology since only a few outer membrane proteins have known three-dimensional structures. During the last few years, some methods have been proposed for the prediction of beta-barrel outer membrane proteins based on statistical analyses (3,4), neural networks (5,6) and Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) (7,8), but so far none of them has been freely available to the scientific community, with the exception of some older methods based on neural networks trained on smaller datasets (5,6), which demonstrated moderate performance. In this work, we present a web server based on a Hidden Markov Model capable of predicting the transmembrane topology of ß-barrel outer membrane proteins. The model is retrained in order to include newly solved three-dimensional structures. The application offers the choice between three different decoding algorithms, and additionally outputs a graphical representation of the assumed topology with respect to the membrane.


    MATERIALS AND METHODS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 THE SERVER
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
PRED-TMBB is based on a Hidden Markov Model (9), a probabilistic model consisting of several states connected by means of the transition probabilities. The architecture of the model is designed to fit as much as possible to the limitations imposed by the known structures. For training, we used Conditional Maximum Likelihood (CML) training for labelled data, as proposed by Krogh (10). This kind of training, often referred to as discriminating training, seeks to maximize the probability of the correct prediction rather than the probability of the sequences, given the model. The parameters of the model (transition and emission probabilities) are updated simultaneously, using the gradients of the likelihood function as described in (11), and the training process terminates when the likelihood does not increase beyond a pre-specified threshold. To reduce the number of the free parameters of the model, and thus improve the generalization capability, states expected to have the same emission probabilities were tied together. Furthermore, to avoid overfitting, the iterations started from emission probabilities corresponding to the initial amino acid frequencies observed in the known protein structures, and small pseudocounts were added at each step. For decoding we implemented three well-known algorithms, the standard Viterbi algorithm (9), the N-best algorithm (12) and posterior decoding using a dynamic programming algorithm. The complete details of the model, the training and the decoding procedure are described elsewhere (13).

The model was retrained in order to include some recently solved three-dimensional structures of ß-barrel outer membrane proteins deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) (14). The total number of sequences in the training set is 16, all belonging to the fold ‘beta-barrel transmembrane proteins’ of the SCOP database (Table 1) (15). The sequences have been submitted to a redundancy check, removing chains with a sequence identity above some threshold. We consider two sequences as being homologues if they possess identical residues >30% in a pairwise alignment in a sequence longer than 80 residues. For the pairwise local alignment we used BlastP (16) with default parameters, and the homologous sequences were removed by implementing Algorithm 2 from Hobohm et al. (17). For training and testing the model, we considered only the part of the beta-strand that is inserted in the lipid bilayer, and not the whole beta-strand, which in some cases extends far away from the membrane. For the transmembrane strand predictions, we report the well-known SOV (measure of the segment's overlap), which is considered to be the most reliable measure for evaluating the performance of secondary structure prediction methods (18). We also report the total number of correctly predicted topologies, i.e. when both the strands' localization and the loops' orientation have been predicted correctly. As measures of the per-residue accuracy, we report here both the total fraction of the correctly predicted residues (Qß) in a two-state model (transmembrane versus non-transmembrane) and the well-known Matthews Correlation Coefficient (Cß) (19). For reasons of fair comparison with other existing methods, all measures of performance were evaluated against the manually derived annotations for the transmembrane segments used by our team for training (13), and also against the annotations of the transmembrane strands as deposited in the PDB, even though, in some cases, these clearly extend beyond the lipid bilayer. Finally, the model produces a score used to discriminate ß-barrel membrane proteins from globular ones (13). This score is just the negative log-likelihood of the sequence given the model, normalized by dividing by the sequence length. Proteins producing a score lower than a predefined threshold (see below) are considered to be beta-barrel membrane proteins.


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Table 1. The non-redundant dataset of 16 outer membrane proteins used for training the model

 

    RESULTS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 THE SERVER
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
The performance of the model is summarized in Table 2, where we list the results obtained by comparing the three different decoding algorithms. We note that the posterior decoding method using the dynamic programming algorithm to locate the transmembrane strands performs marginally better than the Viterbi or the N-best algorithm, as already noted in (20), and should perhaps be preferred. In the self-consistency test (when the model is trained and tested on the whole dataset at the same time) the percentage of correctly predicted residues is 92.2%, the correlation coefficient = 0.84 and SOV = 0.94. When we tested the model using the jackknife procedure (i.e. removing a protein from the training set, training the model with the remaining proteins and performing the test on the protein removed), the percentage of correctly predicted residues is 87.5%, the correlation coefficient = 0.74 and SOV = 0.85. The number of correctly predicted topologies is 12 (15 when counting 3 strands that were predicted misplaced) in the self-consistency test and 8 (11 when counting 3 strands that were predicted misplaced) in the jackknife test. All results reported here are computed according to the posterior decoding method. The results in the jackknife test clearly outperform the original version of the algorithm (13), and also all other methods reported in the literature (68), even though we use only single-sequence information. In Table 3, we also report the prediction performance of two other publicly available predictors on the same dataset. B2TMPRED is the neural network developed in (6), using evolutionary information derived from multiple alignments, and TM-BETA is a newly developed neural network method (21) using single-sequence information. PRED-TMBB, even in the jackknife test reported in Table 2, performs significantly better, although the majority of the proteins in the dataset were also present in the sets used for training these methods. The superiority of our method is due to the model design and the training scheme, and also in part to the complete training set, which is the largest non-redundant set reported in the literature so far. We speculate that other, more refined methods, such as those reported in (7) or (8), would perform comparable to PRED-TMBB, but they are not publicly available. Furthermore, PRED-TMBB is the only available method which is capable of not only predicting the membrane spanning strands but also discriminating beta-barrel membrane proteins. At a fixed score threshold of 2.965, the model correctly discriminated 88% of a non-redundant set of 133 well-annotated outer membrane proteins and 89% of a set of 1100 globular proteins from PDB-Select [for details on these datasets, refer to (13)]. Using the same threshold, it correctly predicted 95% of the 149 beta-barrel membrane proteins deposited in TCDB (22) and 73% of a non-redundant set of 82 alpha-helical membrane proteins with structures known at atomic resolution. Clearly, the model discriminates, with the highest level of accuracy and precision reported so far, beta-barrel membrane proteins from globular ones. However, when it comes to alpha-helical membrane proteins, more reliable predictors already exist (23), and their use should be preferred to filtering completely unknown sequences or screening large datasets (13).


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Table 2. Overall measures of accuracy obtained in the self-consistency and jackknife tests for the three different decoding algorithms

 

View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Table 3. Overall measures of the accuracy of PRED-TMBB and comparison with other available predictors

 

    THE SERVER
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 THE SERVER
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
On the initial page, the user may submit a sequence in FASTA format and has the option of choosing between the three different decoding methods currently available. Decoding can be performed using the N-best algorithm, the standard Viterbi algorithm or ‘a posteriori’ with the aid of a dynamic programming algorithm. The three alternative algorithms can be run simultaneously, but this may slow down the server's reporting time. We should mention here that although the accuracy of PRED-TMBB is not significantly affected by the existence of a signal peptide, the presence of a signal peptide is a strong indication of the protein's localization in the outer membrane. Thus, when it comes to precursor sequences such as those of genome projects, this aspect should also be considered. The final output consists of the prediction for the transmembrane strands (Figure 1). Optionally, the user may obtain a graphical plot showing the posterior probabilities in a three-state mode (extracellular, periplasmic and transmembrane), which may be useful in the case of ambiguously defined topologies. The application also returns the score used for discrimination purposes, thus helping the user to identify possible ß-barrel outer membrane proteins. Another useful feature of the application is the option to produce (after the decoding process) a graphical representation showing the relative position of the predicted transmembrane strands with respect to the lipid bilayer. Such a depiction might be useful for presentation and publication purposes.



View larger version (47K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Figure 1. Output of the prediction obtained from PRED-TMBB for the OmpX of E.coli. (A) The prediction of the transmembrane strands according to posterior decoding. (B) Plot of the posterior probabilities for the transmembrane strands, along the sequence. (C) Graphical representation of the predicted topology with respect to the lipid bilayer.

 

    CONCLUSIONS
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 THE SERVER
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 
We present here a web sever based on a Hidden Markov Model for the prediction of the transmembrane ß-strands of the outer membrane proteins of Gram-negative bacteria. To our knowledge, this is the first time that such a web server accessible to the public has been made. Furthermore, the method performs better than any previously published method and is the only method not only able to predict the strands' localization and the location of the loops (periplasmic/extracellular), but also capable of discriminating beta-barrel membrane proteins from globular ones. The server outputs the prediction of the transmembrane ß-strands, posterior probabilities for the prediction, the discrimination score and a graphical depiction of the protein's orientation with respect to the lipid bilayer, thus making this server a unique and complete approach for the prediction of the transmembrane topology of outer membrane proteins. The Hidden Markov Model parameters will be updated on a regular basis whenever new crystallographically solved structures become available, and we plan to enrich the application with additional new services in the future.


    Notes
 
The online version of this article has been published under an open access model. Users are entitled to use, reproduce, disseminate, or display the open access version of this article provided that: the original authorship is properly and fully attributed; the Journal and Oxford University Press are attributed as the original place of publication with the correct citation details given; if an article is subsequently reproduced or disseminated not in its entirety but only in part or as a derivative work this must be clearly indicated.


    REFERENCES
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 INTRODUCTION
 MATERIALS AND METHODS
 RESULTS
 THE SERVER
 CONCLUSIONS
 REFERENCES
 

  1. Von Heijne,G. ( (1999) ) Recent advances in the understanding of membrane protein assembly and function. Quart. Rev. Biophys., , 32, , 285–307.[CrossRef][Medline]

  2. Schulz,G.E. ( (2002) ) The structure of bacterial outer membrane proteins. Biochim. Biophys. Acta, , 1565, , 308–317.[Medline]

  3. Zhai,Y. and Saier,M.H.,Jr ( (2002) ) The beta-barrel finder (BBF) program, allowing identification of outer membrane beta-barrel proteins encoded within prokaryotic genomes. Protein Sci., , 11, , 2196–2207.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  4. Wimley,W.C. ( (2002) ) Toward genomic identification of beta-barrel membrane proteins: composition and architecture of known structures. Protein Sci., , 11, , 301–312.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  5. Diederichs,K., Freigang,J., Umhau,S., Zeth,K. and Breed,J. ( (1998) ) Prediction by a neural network of outer membrane beta-strand protein topology. Protein Sci., , 7, , 2413–2420.[Abstract]

  6. Jacoboni,I., Martelli,P.L., Fariselli,P., De Pinto,V. and Casadio,R. ( (2001) ) Prediction of the transmembrane regions of beta-barrel membrane proteins with a neural network-based predictor. Protein Sci., , 10, , 779–787.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  7. Liu,Q., Zhu,Y.S., Wang,B.H. and Li,Y.X. ( (2003) ) A HMM-based method to predict the transmembrane regions of beta-barrel membrane proteins. Comput. Biol. Chem., , 27, , 69–76.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

  8. Martelli,P.L., Fariselli,P., Krogh,A. and Casadio,R. ( (2002) ) A sequence-profile-based HMM for predicting and discriminating beta barrel membrane proteins. Bioinformatics, , 18, (Suppl 1), S46–S53.[Abstract]

  9. Rabiner,L. ( (1989) ) A tutorial on hidden Markov models and selected applications in speech recognition. Proc. IEEE, , 77, , 257–286.[CrossRef]

  10. Krogh,A. ( (1994) ) Hidden Markov Models for labelled sequences. Proceedings of the 12th IAPR International Conference on Pattern Recognition, Israel, pp. 140–144.

  11. Baum,L. ( (1972) ) An inequality and associated maximization technique in statistical estimation for probabilistic functions of Markov processes. Inequalities, , 3, , 1–8.

  12. Krogh,A. ( (1997) ) Two methods for improving performance of an HMM and their application for gene finding. Proc. Int. Conf. Intell. Syst. Mol. Biol., , 5, , 179–186.[Medline]

  13. Bagos,P.G., Liakopoulos,T.D., Spyropoulos,I.C. and Hamodrakas,S.J. ( (2004) ) A Hidden Markov Model method, capable of predicting and discriminating beta-barrel outer membrane proteins. BMC Bioinformatics, , 5, , 29.[CrossRef][Medline]

  14. Berman,H.M., Battistuz,T., Bhat,T.N., Bluhm,W.F., Bourne,P.E., Burkhardt,K., Feng,Z., Gilliland,G.L., Iype,L., Jain,S. et al. ( (2002) ) The Protein Data Bank. Acta Crystallogr. D Biol. Crystallogr., , 58, , 899–907.[CrossRef][Medline]

  15. Andreeva,A., Howorth,D., Brenner,S.E., Hubbard,T.J., Chothia,C. and Murzin,A.G. ( (2004) ) SCOP database in 2004: refinements integrate structure and sequence family data. Nucleic Acids Res., , 32, , D226–D229.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  16. Altschul,S.F., Madden,T.L., Schaffer,A.A., Zhang,J., Zhang,Z., Miller,W. and Lipman,D.J. ( (1997) ) Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs. Nucleic Acids Res., , 25, , 3389–3402.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  17. Hobohm,U., Scharf,M., Schneider,R. and Sander,C. ( (1992) ) Selection of representative protein data sets. Protein Sci., , 1, , 409–417.[Abstract]

  18. Zemla,A., Venclovas,C., Fidelis,K. and Rost,B. ( (1999) ) A modified definition of Sov, a segment-based measure for protein secondary structure prediction assessment. Proteins, , 34, , 220–223.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

  19. Baldi,P., Brunak,S., Chauvin,Y., Andersen,C.A. and Nielsen,H. ( (2000) ) Assessing the accuracy of prediction algorithms for classification: an overview. Bioinformatics, , 16, , 412–424.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  20. Fariselli,P., Finelli,M., Marchignoli,D., Martelli,P.L., Rossi,I. and Casadio,R. ( (2003) ) MaxSubSeq: an algorithm for segment-length optimization. The case study of the transmembrane spanning segments. Bioinformatics, , 19, , 500–505.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

  21. Gromiha,M.M., Ahmad,S. and Suwa,M. ( (2004) ) Neural network-based prediction of transmembrane beta-strand segments in outer membrane proteins. J. Comput. Chem., , 25, , 762–767.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

  22. Busch,W. and Saier,M.H.,Jr ( (2002) ) The transporter classification (TC) system, 2002. Crit. Rev. Biochem. Mol. Biol., , 37, , 287–337.[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]

  23. Pasquier,C., Promponas,V.J. and Hamodrakas,S.J. ( (2001) ) PRED-CLASS: cascading neural networks for generalized protein classification and genome-wide applications. Proteins, , 44, , 361–369.[CrossRef][Medline]


Add to CiteULike CiteULike   Add to Connotea Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us Del.icio.us    What's this?


This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Nucleic Acids ResHome page
S. Montgomerie, J. A. Cruz, S. Shrivastava, D. Arndt, M. Berjanskii, and D. S. Wishart
PROTEUS2: a web server for comprehensive protein structure prediction and structure-based annotation
Nucleic Acids Res., July 1, 2008; 36(suppl_2): W202 - W209.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
CVIHome page
C. Zhang, Q. Xiong, T. Kikuchi, and Y. Rikihisa
Identification of 19 Polymorphic Major Outer Membrane Protein Genes and Their Immunogenic Peptides in Ehrlichia ewingii for Use in a Serodiagnostic Assay
Clin. Vaccine Immunol., March 1, 2008; 15(3): 402 - 411.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
BioinformaticsHome page
A. Randall, J. Cheng, M. Sweredoski, and P. Baldi
TMBpro: secondary structure, {beta}-contact and tertiary structure prediction of transmembrane {beta}-barrel proteins
Bioinformatics, February 15, 2008; 24(4): 513 - 520.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J. Bacteriol.Home page
Y. Ge and Y. Rikihisa
Identification of Novel Surface Proteins of Anaplasma phagocytophilum by Affinity Purification and Proteomics
J. Bacteriol., November 1, 2007; 189(21): 7819 - 7828.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Biophys. JHome page
U. Wedemeyer, G. Peng, H. Michel, and K. Hartung
Protein AQ_1862 from the Hyperthermophilic Bacterium Aquifex aeolicus Is a Porin and Contains Two Conductance Pathways of Different Selectivity
Biophys. J., October 15, 2007; 93(8): 2667 - 2677.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Infect. Immun.Home page
Y. Ge and Y. Rikihisa
Surface-Exposed Proteins of Ehrlichia chaffeensis
Infect. Immun., August 1, 2007; 75(8): 3833 - 3841.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
BioinformaticsHome page
S. Sundaresh, A. Randall, B. Unal, J. M. Petersen, J. T. Belisle, M. Gill Hartley, M. Duffield, R. W. Titball, D. H. Davies, P. L. Felgner, et al.
From protein microarrays to diagnostic antigen discovery: a study of the pathogen Francisella tularensis
Bioinformatics, July 1, 2007; 23(13): i508 - i518.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J. Bacteriol.Home page
H. Louvel, S. Bommezzadri, N. Zidane, C. Boursaux-Eude, S. Creno, A. Magnier, Z. Rouy, C. Medigue, I. S. Girons, C. Bouchier, et al.
Comparative and Functional Genomic Analyses of Iron Transport and Regulation in Leptospira spp.
J. Bacteriol., November 15, 2006; 188(22): 7893 - 7904.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
MicrobiologyHome page
S. Forman, A. G. Bobrov, O. Kirillina, S. K. Craig, J. Abney, J. D. Fetherston, and R. D. Perry
Identification of critical amino acid residues in the plague biofilm Hms proteins.
Microbiology, November 1, 2006; 152(Pt 11): 3399 - 3410.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Biophys. JHome page
G. Runke, E. Maier, W. A. T. Summers, D. C. Bay, R. Benz, and D. A. Court
Deletion Variants of Neurospora Mitochondrial Porin: Electrophysiological and Spectroscopic Analysis
Biophys. J., May 1, 2006; 90(9): 3155 - 3164.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Protein Sci.Home page
P. Marani, S. Wagner, L. Baars, P. Genevaux, J.-W. De Gier, I. Nilsson, R. Casadio, and G. Von Heijne
New Escherichia coli outer membrane proteins identified through prediction and experimental verification
Protein Sci., April 1, 2006; 15(4): 884 - 889.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
J. Bacteriol.Home page
S. Letoffe, K. Wecker, M. Delepierre, P. Delepelaire, and C. Wandersman
Activities of the Serratia marcescens Heme Receptor HasR and Isolated Plug and {beta}-Barrel Domains: the {beta}-Barrel Forms a Heme-Specific Channel
J. Bacteriol., July 1, 2005; 187(13): 4637 - 4645.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
MicrobiologyHome page
J. D. Bendtsen, T. T. Binnewies, P. F. Hallin, and D. W. Ussery
Genome update: prediction of membrane proteins in prokaryotic genomes
Microbiology, July 1, 2005; 151(7): 2119 - 2121.
[Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Nucleic Acids ResHome page
M. M. Gromiha, S. Ahmad, and M. Suwa
TMBETA-NET: discrimination and prediction of membrane spanning {beta}-strands in outer membrane proteins
Nucleic Acids Res., July 1, 2005; 33(suppl_2): W164 - W167.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Nucleic Acids ResHome page
A. G. Garrow, A. Agnew, and D. R. Westhead
TMB-Hunt: a web server to screen sequence sets for transmembrane {beta}-barrel proteins
Nucleic Acids Res., July 1, 2005; 33(suppl_2): W188 - W192.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
BioinformaticsHome page
M. M. Gromiha and M. Suwa
A simple statistical method for discriminating outer membrane proteins with better accuracy
Bioinformatics, April 1, 2005; 21(7): 961 - 968.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


This Article
Right arrow Abstract Freely available
Right arrow Print PDF (228K) Freely available
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Add to My Personal Archive
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow Commercial Re-use Guidelines
for Open Access NAR Content
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Bagos, P. G.
Right arrow Articles by Hamodrakas, S. J.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by Bagos, P. G.
Right arrow Articles by Hamodrakas, S. J.
Social Bookmarking
 Add to CiteULike   Add to Connotea   Add to Del.icio.us  
What's this?