Selected article for: "antigen presentation and binding prediction"

Author: Farrell, Damien
Title: epitopepredict: A tool for integrated MHC binding prediction
  • Cord-id: ivrwov08
  • Document date: 2021_2_7
  • ID: ivrwov08
    Snippet: A key step in the cellular adaptive immune response is the presentation of antigen to T cells. During this process short peptides processed from self or foreign proteins may be presented on the surface bound to MHC molecules for binding to T cell receptors. Those that bind and activate an immune response are called epitopes. Computational prediction of T cell epitopes has many applications in vaccine design and immuno-diagnostics. This is the basis of immunoinformatics which allows in silico scr
    Document: A key step in the cellular adaptive immune response is the presentation of antigen to T cells. During this process short peptides processed from self or foreign proteins may be presented on the surface bound to MHC molecules for binding to T cell receptors. Those that bind and activate an immune response are called epitopes. Computational prediction of T cell epitopes has many applications in vaccine design and immuno-diagnostics. This is the basis of immunoinformatics which allows in silico screening of peptides before experiments are performed. The most effective approach is to estimate the binding affinity of a given peptide fragment to MHC class I or II molecules. With the availability of whole genomes for many microbial species it is now feasible to computationally screen whole proteomes for candidate peptides. epitopepredict is a programmatic framework and command line tool designed to aid this process. It provides access to multiple binding prediction algorithms under a single interface and scales for whole genomes using multiple target MHC alleles. A web interface is provided to assist visualization and filtering of the results. The software is freely available under an open source license from https://github.com/dmnfarrell/epitopepredict

    Search related documents:
    Co phrase search for related documents
    • Try single phrases listed below for: 1