Embedded-AMP: A Multi-Thread Computational Method for the Systematic Identification of Antimicrobial Peptides Embedded in Proteome Sequences.
Germán Meléndrez CarballoKaren Guerrero VázquezLuis A García-GonzálezGabriel Del RioCarlos A BrizuelaPublished in: Antibiotics (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have gained the attention of the research community for being an alternative to conventional antimicrobials to fight antibiotic resistance and for displaying other pharmacologically relevant activities, such as cell penetration, autophagy induction, immunomodulation, among others. The identification of AMPs had been accomplished by combining computational and experimental approaches and have been mostly restricted to self-contained peptides despite accumulated evidence indicating AMPs may be found embedded within proteins, the functions of which are not necessarily associated with antimicrobials. To address this limitation, we propose a machine-learning (ML)-based pipeline to identify AMPs that are embedded in proteomes. Our method performs an in-silico digestion of every protein in the proteome to generate unique k -mers of different lengths, computes a set of molecular descriptors for each k -mer, and performs an antimicrobial activity prediction. To show the efficiency of the method we used the shrimp proteome, and the pipeline analyzed all k -mers between 10 and 60 amino acids in length to predict all AMPs in less than 20 min. As an application example we predicted AMPs in different rodents (common cuy, common rat, and naked mole rat) with different reported longevities and found a relation between species longevity and the number of predicted AMPs. The analysis shows as the longevity of the species is higher, the number of predicted AMPs is also higher. The pipeline is available as a web service.
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