TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards a systematics for protein subcelluar location
T2 - quantitative description of protein localization patterns and automated analysis of fluorescence microscope images.
AU - Murphy, R. F.
AU - Boland, M. V.
AU - Velliste, M.
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Determination of the functions of all expressed proteins represents one of the major upcoming challenges in computational molecular biology. Since subcellular location plays a crucial role in protein function, the availability of systems that can predict location from sequence or high-throughput systems that determine location experimentally will be essential to the full characterization of expressed proteins. The development of prediction systems is currently hindered by an absence of training data that adequately captures the complexity of protein localization patterns. What is needed is a systematics for the subcellular locations of proteins. This paper describes an approach to the quantitative description of protein localization patterns using numerical features and the use of these features to develop classifiers that can recognize all major subcellular structures in fluorescence microscope images. Such classifiers provide a valuable tool for experiments aimed at determining the subcellular distributions of all expressed proteins. The features also have application in automated interpretation of imaging experiments, such as the selection of representative images or the rigorous statistical comparison of protein distributions under different experimental conditions. A key conclusion is that, at least in certain cases, these automated approaches are better able to distinguish similar protein localization patterns than human observers.
AB - Determination of the functions of all expressed proteins represents one of the major upcoming challenges in computational molecular biology. Since subcellular location plays a crucial role in protein function, the availability of systems that can predict location from sequence or high-throughput systems that determine location experimentally will be essential to the full characterization of expressed proteins. The development of prediction systems is currently hindered by an absence of training data that adequately captures the complexity of protein localization patterns. What is needed is a systematics for the subcellular locations of proteins. This paper describes an approach to the quantitative description of protein localization patterns using numerical features and the use of these features to develop classifiers that can recognize all major subcellular structures in fluorescence microscope images. Such classifiers provide a valuable tool for experiments aimed at determining the subcellular distributions of all expressed proteins. The features also have application in automated interpretation of imaging experiments, such as the selection of representative images or the rigorous statistical comparison of protein distributions under different experimental conditions. A key conclusion is that, at least in certain cases, these automated approaches are better able to distinguish similar protein localization patterns than human observers.
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M3 - Article
C2 - 10977086
AN - SCOPUS:0034564140
SN - 1553-0833
VL - 8
SP - 251
EP - 259
JO - Proceedings / . International Conference on Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology ; ISMB. International Conference on Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology
JF - Proceedings / . International Conference on Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology ; ISMB. International Conference on Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology
ER -