| Literature DB >> 17892321 |
Doron Betel1, Kevin E Breitkreuz, Ruth Isserlin, Danielle Dewar-Darch, Mike Tyers, Christopher W V Hogue.
Abstract
The multitude of functions performed in the cell are largely controlled by a set of carefully orchestrated protein interactions often facilitated by specific binding of conserved domains in the interacting proteins. Interacting domains commonly exhibit distinct binding specificity to short and conserved recognition peptides called binding profiles. Although many conserved domains are known in nature, only a few have well-characterized binding profiles. Here, we describe a novel predictive method known as domain-motif interactions from structural topology (D-MIST) for elucidating the binding profiles of interacting domains. A set of domains and their corresponding binding profiles were derived from extant protein structures and protein interaction data and then used to predict novel protein interactions in yeast. A number of the predicted interactions were verified experimentally, including new interactions of the mitotic exit network, RNA polymerases, nucleotide metabolism enzymes, and the chaperone complex. These results demonstrate that new protein interactions can be predicted exclusively from sequence information.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17892321 PMCID: PMC1988853 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Figure 1Outline of D-MIST Method for Predicting Protein Interactions by Learned Binding Profiles
Identification of domain-binding profiles begins by extracting the short sequence motifs from structural complexes that contain the domain of interest.
(A) In this example, RhoGAP-interacting motifs are extracted from two structural complexes (PDB ID 1AM4, 1TX4) where RhoGAP is bound to small G proteins.
(B) Protein interactions containing the RhoGAP domain were collected from four databases to form the learning set for the Gibbs sampling to generate the binding profiles (shown here as sequence logos [57]). The sampling step is biased towards motifs that are similar to those found in the structural dataset.
(C) The resulting PSSMs are used to predict interactions for proteins with RhoGAP domains, such as the human ARHGAP1. A subset of the predicted interactions is subsequently tested by two experimental methods.
Figure 2Predicted Interactions Verified by IP-MS
Immunoaffinity purification of bait proteins complexes followed by mass spectrometry identification of associated proteins confirmed 37 predicted interactions. Predictions between proteins that were both co-purified with the tagged bait protein (i.e., both proteins were prey) were not considered validated. Proteins are coloured according to their Gene Ontology biological process annotation.
Figure 3Predicted Interactions Confirmed by Experiments or by Previously Published Results in the Primary Literature
Interactions are coloured according to their verification source. Dashed red lines are predictions that were confirmed by IP-MS but not confirmed by IP-western; dashed green lines are predictions that failed experimental validation by IP-western.