| Literature DB >> 15838129 |
Ann E Loraine1, Gregg A Helt, Melissa S Cline, Michael A Siani-Rose.
Abstract
Understanding the functional significance of alternative splicing and other mechanisms that generate RNA transcript diversity is an important challenge facing modern-day molecular biology. Using homology-based, protein sequence analysis methods, it should be possible to investigate how transcript diversity impacts protein structure and function. To test this, a data mining technique ("DiffHit") was developed to identify and catalog genes producing protein isoforms which exhibit distinct profiles of conserved protein motifs. We found that out of a test set of over 1,300 alternatively spliced genes with solved genomic structure, over 30% exhibited a differential profile of conserved InterPro and/or Blocks protein motifs across distinct isoforms. These results suggest that motif databases such as Blocks and InterPro are potentially useful tools for investigating how alternative transcript structure affects gene function.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 15838129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc IEEE Comput Soc Bioinform Conf ISSN: 1555-3930