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Piero Fariselli, Giacomo Finocchiaro, Rita Casadio, SPEPlip: the detection of signal peptide and lipoprotein cleavage sites, Bioinformatics, Volume 19, Issue 18, December 2003, Pages 2498–2499, https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btg360
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Abstract
Summary: SPEPlip is a neural network-based method, trained and tested on a set of experimentally derived signal peptides from eukaryotes and prokaryotes. SPEPlip identifies the presence of sorting signals and predicts their cleavage sites. The accuracy in cross-validation is similar to that of other available programs: the rate of false positives is 4 and 6%, for prokaryotes and eukaryotes respectively and that of false negatives is 3% in both cases. When a set of 409 prokaryotic lipoproteins is predicted, SPEPlip predicts 97% of the chains in the signal peptide class. However, by integrating SPEPlip with a regular expression search utility based on the PROSITE pattern, we can successfully discriminate signal peptide-containing chains from lipoproteins. We propose the method for detecting and discriminating signal peptides containing chains and lipoproteins.
Availability: It can be accessed through the web page at http://gpcr.biocomp.unibo.it/predictors/
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Author notes
Laboratory of Biocomputing, CIRB/Department of Biology, University of Bologna, via Irnerio 42, 40126 Bologna, Italy