Amino Acid Sequence Autocorrelation Vectors and Ensembles of Bayesian-Regularized Genetic Neural Networks for Prediction of Conformational Stability of Human Lysozyme Mutants

Development of novel computational approaches for modeling protein properties from their primary structure is a main goal in applied proteomics. In this work, we reported the extension of the autocorrelation vector formalism to amino acid sequences for encoding protein structural information with modeling purposes. Amino Acid Sequence Autocorrelation (AASA) vectors were calculated by measuring the autocorrelations at sequence lags ranging from 1 to 15 on the protein primary structure of 48 amino acid/residue properties selected from the AAindex database. A total of 720 AASA descriptors were tested for building predictive models of the thermal unfolding Gibbs free energy change of human lysozyme mutants. In this sense, ensembles of Bayesian-Regularized Genetic Neural Networks (BRGNNs) were used for obtaining an optimum nonlinear model for the conformational stability. The ensemble predictor described about 88% and 68% variance of the data in training and test sets, respectively. Furthermore, the optimum AASA vector subset was shown not only to successfully model unfolding thermal stability but also to distribute wild-type and mutant lysozymes on a stability Self-organized Map (SOM) when used for unsupervised training of competitive neurons.