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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Feb 12, 2026

Demonstration of the Sequence Alignment to Predict Across Species Susceptibility Tool for Rapid Assessment of Protein Conservation
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Rapid and interpretable protein contact map prediction using a pattern-matching strategy.

Aysima Hacisuleyman1, Dirk Fasshauer1

  • 1Department of Computational Biology, University of Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.

Physical Biology
|February 10, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A new template-based pattern-matching method predicts protein contact maps efficiently. This approach requires fewer computational resources than deep learning or coevolution methods, offering a valuable alternative for protein structure prediction.

Keywords:
contact maps predictionhomologous structurespattern matchingsequence–structure relationshipstructural templates

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Area of Science:

  • Structural Biology
  • Computational Biology
  • Bioinformatics

Background:

  • The gap between sequenced proteins and experimentally determined structures is widening.
  • Current methods like AlphaFold2 and coevolution analysis (MI, DCA) have limitations, including high computational costs and reliance on extensive sequence data.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a computationally efficient and interpretable method for predicting protein contact maps.
  • To offer an alternative to existing methods, particularly for proteins with limited sequence homologs or when rapid predictions are needed.

Main Methods:

  • A template-based pattern-matching approach identifying conserved structural motifs from homologous structures.
  • Encoding spatial arrangements of residues as sequence patterns and aligning them to query sequences.
  • Utilizing a modest number of structural templates (50-500) and standard hardware without GPUs.

Main Results:

  • Achieved high correlations (0.735-0.942) with experimental contact maps on 25 protein domains.
  • Demonstrated better contact coverage than MI and GREMLIN with comparable accuracy.
  • Achieved a mean F1-score of 0.609 ± 0.095 and accuracy of 0.954 ± 0.036 on 7,599 poorly annotated sequences.

Conclusions:

  • The pattern-matching method is a computationally efficient, interpretable alternative to deep learning and coevolution-based approaches.
  • This method is particularly valuable for proteins with limited sequence homologs or when rapid predictions are essential.
  • The approach successfully predicts protein contact maps using conserved structural motifs and modest computational resources.