Sciweavers

GECCO
2007
Springer

Peptide detectability following ESI mass spectrometry: prediction using genetic programming

14 years 5 months ago
Peptide detectability following ESI mass spectrometry: prediction using genetic programming
The accurate quantification of proteins is important in several areas of cell biology, biotechnology and medicine. Both relative and absolute quantification of proteins is often determined following mass spectrometric analysis of one or more of their constituent peptides. However, in order for quantification to be successful, it is important that the experimenter knows which peptides are readily detectable under the mass spectrometric conditions used for analysis. In this paper, genetic programming is used to develop a function which predicts the detectability of peptides from their calculated physico-chemical properties. Classification is carried out in two stages: the selection of a good classifier using the AUROC objective function and the setting of an appropriate threshold. This allows the user to select the balance point between conflicting priorities in an intuitive way. The success of this method is found to be highly dependent on the initial selection of input parameters. The...
David C. Wedge, Simon J. Gaskell, Simon J. Hubbard
Added 07 Jun 2010
Updated 07 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where GECCO
Authors David C. Wedge, Simon J. Gaskell, Simon J. Hubbard, Douglas B. Kell, King Wai Lau, Claire Eyers
Comments (0)