prof(1)


NAME

   prof - secondary structure and solvent accessibility predictor

SYNOPSIS

   prof [INPUTFILE+] [OPTIONS]

DESCRIPTION

   Secondary structure is predicted by a system of neural networks rating
   at an expected average accuracy > 72% for the three states helix,
   strand and loop (Rost & Sander, PNAS, 1993 , 90, 7558-7562; Rost &
   Sander, JMB, 1993 , 232, 584-599; and Rost & Sander, Proteins, 1994 ,
   19, 55-72; evaluation of accuracy). Evaluated on the same data set,
   PROFsec is rated at ten percentage points higher three-state accuracy
   than methods using only single sequence information, and at more than
   six percentage points higher than, e.g., a method using alignment
   information based on statistics (Levin, Pascarella, Argos & Garnier,
   Prot. Engng., 6, 849-54, 1993).  PHDsec predictions have three main
   features:

   1. improved accuracy through evolutionary information from multiple
   sequence alignments
   2. improved beta-strand prediction through a balanced training
   procedure
   3. more accurate prediction of secondary structure segments by using a
   multi-level system

   Solvent accessibility is predicted by a neural network method rating at
   a correlation coefficient (correlation between experimentally observed
   and predicted relative solvent accessibility) of 0.54 cross-validated
   on a set of 238 globular proteins (Rost & Sander, Proteins, 1994, 20,
   216-226; evaluation of accuracy). The output of the neural network
   codes for 10 states of relative accessibility. Expressed in units of
   the difference between prediction by homology modelling (best method)
   and prediction at random (worst method), PROFacc is some 26 percentage
   points superior to a comparable neural network using three output
   states (buried, intermediate, exposed) and using no information from
   multiple alignments.

   Transmembrane helices in integral membrane proteins are predicted by a
   system of neural networks. The shortcoming of the network system is
   that often too long helices are predicted. These are cut by an
   empirical filter. The final prediction (Rost et al., Protein Science,
   1995, 4, 521-533; evaluation of accuracy) has an expected per-residue
   accuracy of about 95%. The number of false positives, i.e.,
   transmembrane helices predicted in globular proteins, is about 2%.  The
   neural network prediction of transmembrane helices (PHDhtm) is refined
   by a dynamic programming-like algorithm. This method resulted in
   correct predictions of all transmembrane helices for 89% of the 131
   proteins used in a cross-validation test; more than 98% of the
   transmembrane helices were correctly predicted. The output of this
   method is used to predict topology, i.e., the orientation of the N-term
   with respect to the membrane. The expected accuracy of the topology
   prediction is > 86%. Prediction accuracy is higher than average for
   eukaryotic proteins and lower than average for prokaryotes. PHDtopology
   is more accurate than all other methods tested on identical data sets.

   If no output file option (such as --fileRdb or --fileOut) is given the
   RDB formatted output is written into ./INPUTFILENAME.prof where 'prof'
   replaces the extension of the input file.  In lack of extension '.prof'
   is appended to the input file name.

   Output format
   The RDB format is self-annotating, see example outputs in
   /share/profphd/prof/exa.

REFERENCES

   Rost, B. and Sander, C. (1994a). Combining evolutionary information and
   neural networks to predict protein secondary structure. Proteins,
   19(1), 55-72.
   Rost, B. and Sander, C. (1994b). Conservation and prediction of solvent
   accessibility in protein families. Proteins, 20(3), 216-26.
   Rost, B., Casadio, R., Fariselli, P., and Sander, C. (1995).
   Transmembrane helices predicted at 95% accuracy. Protein Sci, 4(3),
   521-33.

OPTIONS

   See each keyword for more help.  Most of these are likely to be broken.

   a   alternative connectivity patterns (default=3)

   3   predict sec + acc + htm

   acc predict solvent accessibility, only

   ali add alignment to 'human-readable' PROF output file(s)

   arch
       system architecture (e.g.: SGI64|SGI5|SGI32|SUNMP|ALPHA)

   ascii
       write 'human-readable' PROF output file(s)

   best
       PROF with best accuracy and longest run-time

   both
       predict secondary structure and solvent accessibility

   data
       data=<all|brief|normal|detail>  for HTML out: only those parts of
       predictions written

   debug
       keep most intermediate files, print debugging messages

   dirWork
       work directory, default: a temporary directory from
       File::Temp::tempdir. Must be fully qualified path.

       Known to work.

   doEval
       DO evaluation for list (only for known structures and lists)

   doFilterHssp
       filter the input HSSP file       (excluding some pairs)

   doHtmfil
       DO filter the membrane prediction                  (default)

   doHtmisit
       DO check strength of predicted membrane helix      (default)

   doHtmref
       DO refine the membrane prediction                  (default)

   doHtmtop
       DO membrane helix topology                         (default)

   dssp
       convert PROF into DSSP format

   expand
       expand insertions when converting output to MSF format

   fast
       PROF with lowest accuracy and highest speed

   fileCasp
       name of PROF output in CASP format              (file.caspProf)

   fileDssp
       name of PROF output in DSSP format              (file.dsspProf)

   fileHtml
       name of PROF output in HTML format              (file.htmlProf)

   fileMsf
       name of PROF output in MSF format               (file.msfProf)

   fileNotHtm
       name of file flagging that no membrane helix was found

   fileOut
       name of PROF output in RDB format               (file.rdbProf)

       Known to work.

   fileProf
       name of PROF output in human readable format    (file.prof)

       Broken.

   fileRdb
       name of PROF output in RDB format               (file.rdbProf)

       Known to work.

   fileSaf
       name of PROF output in SAF format               (file.safProf)

   filter
       filter the input HSSP file       (excluding some pairs)

   good
       PROF with good accuracy and moderate speed

   graph
       add ASCII graph to 'human-readable' PROF output file(s)

   htm use: 'htm=<N|0.N>' gives minimal transmembrane helix detected
       default is 'htm=8' (resp. htm=0.8)  smaller numbers more false
       positives and fewer false negatives!

   html   argument
       'hmtl' or 'html=<all|body|head>' write HTML format of prediction
       'html' will result in that the PROF output is converted to HTML
       'html=body' restricts HTML file to the HTML_BODY tag part
       'html=head' restricts HTML file to the HTML_HEADER tag part
       'html=all'  gives both HEADER and BODY

   keepConv
       keep the conversion of the input file to HSSP format

   keepFilter argument
       <*|doKeepFilter=1>     keep the filtered HSSP file

   keepHssp  argument
       <*|doKeepHssp=1>         keep the intermediate HSSP file

   keepNetDb argument
       <*|doKeepNetDb=1>       keep the intermediate DbNet file(s)

   list argument
       <*|isList=1>      input file is list of files

   msf convert PROF into MSF format

   nice
       give 'nice-D' to set the nice value (priority) of the job

   noProfHead
       do NOT copy file with tables into local directory

   noSearch
       short for doSearchFile=0, i.e. no searching of DB files

   noascii
       surpress writing ASCII (i.e. human readable) result files

   nohtml
       surpress writing HTML result files

   nonice
       job will not be niced, i.e. not run with lower priority

   notEval
       DO NOT check accuracy even when known structures

   notHtmfil
       do NOT filter the membrane prediction

   notHtmisit
       do NOT check whether or not membrane helix strong enough

   notHtmref
       do NOT refine the membrane prediction

   notHtmtop
       do NOT membrane helix topology

   nresPerLineAli
       Number of characters used for MSF file. Default: 50.

   numresMin
       Minimal number of residues to run network, otherwise
       prd=symbolPrdShort. Default: 9.

   optJury
       Adds PHD to jury. Default: `normal,usePHD'.

       Many other parameters change the default for this one as a side-
       effect, the list is not comprehensive:

       phd, nophd, /^para(3|Both|Sec|Acc|Htm|CapH|CapE|CapHE)/, /^para?/,
       jct

   para3
       Parameter file for sec+acc+htm. Default:
       `<DIRPROF>/net/PROFboth_best.par'.

   paraAcc
       Parameter file for acc. Default: `<DIRPROF>/net/PROFacc_best.par'.

   paraBoth
       Parameter file for sec+acc. Default:
       `<DIRPROF>/net/PROFboth_best.par'.

   paraSec
       Parameter file for sec. Default: `<DIRPROF>/net/PROFsec_best.par'.

   riSubAcc
       Minimal reliability index (RI) for subset PROFacc. Default: 4.

   riSubSec
       Minimal reliability index (RI) for subset PROFsec. Default: 5.

   riSubSym
       Symbol for residues predicted with RI < riSubSec/Acc. Default: `.'.

   s_k_i_p
       problems, manual, hints, notation, txt, known, DONE, Date, date,
       aa, Lhssp, numaa, code

   saf convert PROF into SAF format

   scrAddHelp
   scrGoal
       neural network switching

   scrHelpTxt
       Input file formats accepted:
       hssp,dssp,msf,saf,fastamul,pirmul,fasta,pir,gcg,swiss

   scrIn
       list_of_files (or single file) parameter_file

   scrName
       prof

   scrNarg
       2

   sec predict secondary structure,   only

   silent
       no information written to screen - this is the default

   skipMissing
       do not abort if input file missing!

   sourceFile
       prof

   test
       is just a test (faster)

   translate-jobid-in-param-values
       String 'jobid' gets substituted with $par{jobid}

   tst quick run through program, low accuracy

   user
       user name

   --version
       Print version

AUTHOR

   B. Rost, Sander C, Fariselli P, Casadio R, Liu J, Yachdav G, Kajan L.

EXAMPLES

   Prediction from alignment in HSSP file for best results
        prof /share/profphd/prof/exa/1ppt.hssp fileRdb=/tmp/1ppt.hssp.prof

   Prediction from a single sequence
        prof /share/profphd/prof/exa/1ppt.f fileRdb=/tmp/1ppt.f.rdbProf

   phd.pl invocation
        /share/profphd/prof/embl/phd.pl /share/profphd/prof/exa/1ppt.hssp htm fileOutPhd=/tmp/query.phdPred  fileOutRdb=/tmp/query.phdRdb  fileNotHtm=/tmp/query.phdNotHtm

ENVIRONMENT

   PROFPHDDIR
       Override package prof package dir /share/profphd.

   RGUTILSDIR
       Override location of librg-utils-perl /share/librg-utils-perl.

FILES

   *.rdbProf
       default output file extension

   /share/profphd/prof
       default data directory

BUGS

   Please report bugs at
   <https://rostlab.org/bugzilla3/enter_bug.cgi?product=profphd>.

   Prediction from HSSP file fails when residue lines with exclamation
   marks `!' are present:
       Use 'optJury=normal' and 'both' like this:

        prof /tmp/1a3q.hssp fileRdb=/tmp/1a3q.hssp.profRdb optJury=normal both

SEE ALSO

   Main website
       <http://www.predictprotein.org/>

   Documentation
       <http://www.predictprotein.org/docs.php>

   Community website
       <http://groups.google.com/group/PredictProtein>

   FTP <ftp://rostlab.org/pub/cubic/downloads/prof>

   Newsgroups
       <http://groups.google.com/group/PredictProtein>





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