Model for Vaccine Design by prediction of B-Epitopes of IEDB given perturbations in peptide sequence, in vivo process, experimental techniques, and source or host organisms
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Hindawi
Abstract
Perturbation methods add variation terms to a known experimental solution of one problem to approach a solution for a related
problem without known exact solution. One problem of this type in immunology is the prediction of the possible action of epitope of
one peptide after a perturbation or variation in the structure of a known peptide and/or other boundary conditions (host organism,
biological process, and experimental assay). However, to the best of our knowledge, there are no reports of general-purpose
perturbation models to solve this problem. In a recent work, we introduced a new quantitative structure-property relationship
theory for the study of perturbations in complex biomolecular systems. In this work, we developed the first model able to classify
more than 200,000 cases of perturbations with accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity >90% both in training and validation series.
The perturbations include structural changes in >50000 peptides determined in experimental assays with boundary conditions
involving >500 source organisms, >50 host organisms, >10 biological process, and >30 experimental techniques. The model may
be useful for the prediction of new epitopes or the optimization of known peptides towards computational vaccine design
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González Díaz, H., Pérez Montoto, L. G., y Martínez Ubeira, Florencio César. (2014). Model for vaccine design by prediction of B-epitopes of IEDB given perturbations in peptide sequence, in vivo process, experimental techniques, and source or host organisms. Journal of immunology research, vol. 2014(ID 768515), 15
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https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/768515Sponsors
The present study was partially supported by Grants AGL2010-22290-C02 and AGL2011-30563-C03 from Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion, Spain, and Grant CN 2012/155 ´ from Xunta de Galicia, Spain
Rights
Copyright © 2014 Humberto Gonzalez-Díaz et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited



