SNAP predicts effect of mutations on protein function

Yana Bromberg(New York Structural Biology Center), Guy Yachdav(New York Structural Biology Center), Burkhard Rost(New York Structural Biology Center)
Bioinformatics
August 30, 2008
Cited by 277Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Summary: Many non-synonymous single nucleotide polymor-phisms (nsSNPs) in humans are suspected to impact protein function. Here, we present a publicly available server implementation of the method SNAP (screening for non-acceptable polymorphisms) that predicts the functional effects of single amino acid substitutions. SNAP identifies over 80% of the non-neutral mutations at 77% accuracy and over 76% of the neutral mutations at 80% accuracy at its default threshold. Each prediction is associated with a reliability index that correlates with accuracy and thereby enables experimentalists to zoom into the most promising predictions. Availability: Web-server: http://www.rostlab.org/services/SNAP; downloadable program available upon request. Contact: bromberg@rostlab.org Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


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