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Biases in the Experimental Annotations of Protein Function and their Effect on Our Understanding of Protein Function Space

by: Alexandra M. Schnoes, David C. Ream, Alexander W. Thorman, Patricia C. Babbitt, Iddo Friedberg
(21 Jan 2013)  Key: citeulike:11890145

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Abstract

The ongoing functional annotation of proteins relies upon the work of curators to capture experimental findings from scientific literature and apply them to protein sequence and structure data. However, with the increasing use of high-throughput experimental assays, a small number of experimental studies dominate the functional protein annotations collected in databases. Here we investigate just how prevalent is the "few articles - many proteins" phenomenon. We examine the annotation of UniProtKB by the Gene Ontology Annotation project, and show that the distribution of proteins per published study is exponential, with 0.14% of articles annotating 25% of the proteins in UniProt-GOA. Since each of the dominant articles describes the use of an assay that can find only one function or a small group of functions, this leads to substantial biases in what we know about the function of many proteins. Mass-spectrometry, microscopy and RNAi experiments dominate high throughput experiments. Consequently, the functional information derived from these experiments is mostly of the subcellular location of proteins, and for participation in embryonic developmental pathways. For some organisms, the information provided by different studies overlap by a large amount. We also show that the information provided by high throughput experiments is less specific than those provided by low throughput experiments. Given the experimental techniques available, certain biases in protein function annotation due to high-throughput experiments are unavoidable. Knowing that these biases exist and understanding their characteristics and extent is important for database curators, developers of function annotation programs, and anyone who uses protein function annotation data to plan experiments.


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