ElliPro: a new structure-based tool for the prediction of antibody epitopes
San Diego Supercomputer Center · University of Montana · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Reliable prediction of antibody, or B-cell, epitopes remains challenging yet highly desirable for the design of vaccines and immunodiagnostics. A correlation between antigenicity, solvent accessibility, and flexibility in proteins was demonstrated. Subsequently, Thornton and colleagues proposed a method for identifying continuous epitopes in the protein regions protruding from the protein's globular surface. The aim of this work was to implement that method as a web-tool and evaluate its performance on discontinuous epitopes known from the structures of antibody-protein complexes.
Here we present ElliPro, a web-tool that implements Thornton's method and, together with a residue clustering algorithm, the MODELLER program and the Jmol viewer, allows the prediction and visualization of antibody epitopes in a given protein sequence or structure. ElliPro has been tested on a benchmark dataset of discontinuous epitopes inferred from 3D structures of antibody-protein complexes. In comparison with six other structure-based methods that can be used for epitope prediction, ElliPro performed the best and gave an AUC value of 0.732, when the most significant prediction was considered for each protein. Since the rank of the best prediction was at most in the top three for more than 70% of proteins and never exceeded five, ElliPro is considered a useful research tool for identifying antibody epitopes in protein antigens. ElliPro is available at http://tools.immuneepitope.org/tools/ElliPro.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 5.47
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 23
Authors
7- JPJulia PonomarenkoCorresponding
San Diego Supercomputer Center, University of Montana, University of California, San Diego
- HBHuynh‐Hoa Bui
Ionis Pharmaceuticals (United States)
- WLWei Li
University of California, San Diego, University of Montana
- NFNicholas Fusseder
- PEPhilip E. Bourne
University of California, San Diego, San Diego Supercomputer Center, University of Montana
Topics & keywords
- Epitope
- Computational biology
- Computer science
- Linear epitope
- Antibody
- UniProt
- Biology
- Genetics
- Reduced inequalities