Cluster conservation as a novel tool for studying protein-protein interactions evolution

被引:13
|
作者
Rahat, Ofer [1 ]
Yitzhaky, Assif [2 ]
Schreiber, Gideon [1 ]
机构
[1] Weizmann Inst Sci, Dept Biol Chem, IL-76100 Rehovot, Israel
[2] Weizmann Inst Sci, Dept Phys Complex Syst, IL-76100 Rehovot, Israel
关键词
structural bioinformatics; protein-protein interactions; networks; structural alignment; evolution;
D O I
10.1002/prot.21749
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Protein-protein interactions networks has come to be a buzzword associated with nets containing edges that represent a pair of interacting proteins (e.g. hormone-receptor, enzyme-inhibitor, antigen-antibody, and a subset of multichain biological machines). Yet, each such interaction composes its own unique network, in which vertices represent amino acid residues, and edges represent atomic contacts. Recent studies have shown that analyses of the data encapsulated in these detailed networks may impact predictions of structure-function correlation. Here, we study homologous families of protein-protein interfaces, which share the same fold but vary in sequence. In this context, we address what properties of the network are shared among relatives with different sequences (and hence different atomic interactions) and which are not. Herein, we develop the general mathematical framework needed to compare the modularity of homologous networks. We then apply this analysis to the structural data of a few interface families, including hemoglobin alpha-beta, growth hormone-receptor, and Serine protease-inhibitor. Our results suggest that interface modularity is an evolutionarily conserved property. Hence, protein-protein interfaces can be clustered down to a few modules, with the boundaries being evolutionarily conserved along homologous complexes. This suggests that protein engineering of protein-protein binding sites may be simplified by varying each module, but retaining the overall modularity of the interface.
引用
收藏
页码:621 / 630
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] BLOTTING AND BAND-SHIFTING - TECHNIQUES FOR STUDYING PROTEIN-PROTEIN INTERACTIONS
    CARR, DW
    SCOTT, JD
    TRENDS IN BIOCHEMICAL SCIENCES, 1992, 17 (07) : 246 - 249
  • [32] NMR methods for studying protein-protein interactions involved in translation initiation
    Marintchev, Assen
    Frueh, Dominique
    Wagner, Gerhard
    TRANSLATION INITIATION: RECONSTITUTED SYSTEMS AND BIOPHYSICAL METHODS, 2007, 430 : 283 - +
  • [33] Studying inner ear protein-protein interactions using FRET and FLIM
    Hallworth, Richard
    Currall, Benjamin
    Nichols, Michael G.
    Wu, Xudong
    Zuo, Jian
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2006, 1091 : 122 - 131
  • [34] Application of Biolayer Interferometry (BLI) for Studying Protein-Protein Interactions in Transcription
    Desai, Malhar
    Di, Rong
    Fan, Huizhou
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2019, (149):
  • [35] Studying Protein-Protein Interactions of Receptor Tyrosine Kinases on μ-Patterned Surfaces
    Lanzerstorfer, Peter
    Steininger, Andrea
    Takahashi, Shin Ichiro
    Hoeglinger, Otmar
    Weghuber, Julian
    BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2013, 104 (02) : 608A - 608A
  • [36] The monolayer technique as a tool to study the energetics of protein-protein interactions
    Lavigne, P
    Tancrède, P
    Lamarche, F
    BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-PROTEIN STRUCTURE AND MOLECULAR ENZYMOLOGY, 1998, 1382 (02): : 249 - 256
  • [37] Peptidomimetics: A Synthetic Tool for Inhibiting Protein-Protein Interactions in Cancer
    Mabonga, Lloyd
    Kappo, Abidemi Paul
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PEPTIDE RESEARCH AND THERAPEUTICS, 2020, 26 (01) : 225 - 241
  • [38] PPI Finder: A Mining Tool for Human Protein-Protein Interactions
    He, Min
    Wang, Yi
    Li, Wei
    PLOS ONE, 2009, 4 (02):
  • [39] HSPPIP: An Online tool for prediction of protein-protein interactions in humans
    Xue, Yu
    Jin, Changjiang
    Yao, Xuebiao
    COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE AND BIOINFORMATICS, PT 3, PROCEEDINGS, 2006, 4115 : 603 - 611
  • [40] Prediction of protein-protein interactions: unifying evolution and structure at protein interfaces
    Tuncbag, Nurcan
    Gursoy, Attila
    Keskin, Ozlem
    PHYSICAL BIOLOGY, 2011, 8 (03)