| Literature DB >> 22303436 |
Manoj Tyagi1, Ratna R Thangudu, Dachuan Zhang, Stephen H Bryant, Thomas Madej, Anna R Panchenko.
Abstract
The coverage and reliability of protein-protein interactions determined by high-throughput experiments still needs to be improved, especially for higher organisms, therefore the question persists, how interactions can be verified and predicted by computational approaches using available data on protein structural complexes. Recently we developed an approach called IBIS (Inferred Biomolecular Interaction Server) to predict and annotate protein-protein binding sites and interaction partners, which is based on the assumption that the structural location and sequence patterns of protein-protein binding sites are conserved between close homologs. In this study first we confirmed high accuracy of our method and found that its accuracy depends critically on the usage of all available data on structures of homologous complexes, compared to the approaches where only a non-redundant set of complexes is employed. Second we showed that there exists a trade-off between specificity and sensitivity if we employ in the prediction only evolutionarily conserved binding site clusters or clusters supported by only one observation (singletons). Finally we addressed the question of identifying the biologically relevant interactions using the homology inference approach and demonstrated that a large majority of crystal packing interactions can be correctly identified and filtered by our algorithm. At the same time, about half of biological interfaces that are not present in the protein crystallographic asymmetric unit can be reconstructed by IBIS from homologous complexes without the prior knowledge of crystal parameters of the query protein.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22303436 PMCID: PMC3269416 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Overview of IBIS.
Figure 2Reconstructing biounits by homology inference.
Recovery of those homooligomeric interfaces by IBIS which can only be produced by applying crystallographic symmetry operations to PDB ASU. Recovery rate is calculated as a number of binding site residues identified by both PISA and IBIS divided by the number of binding site residues identified by PISA by applying crystallographic symmetry operations.
Figure 3Percentage and frequency of CDD annotated binding sites predicted by IBIS at a given rank.
Specificity and sensitivity of IBIS to predict protein-protein interaction.
| Predicted interactions from conserved binding site clusters | Predicted interactions from all binding site clusters | |
| Specificity (76 crystal packinginterfaces) | 8 (89%) | 25 (67%) |
| Sensitivity (74 biological interfaces) | 50 (68%) | 65 (88%) |
Specificity drops to 67% when interactions from singleton clusters are also considered.
Sensitivity drops to 68% when interactions from only conserved clusters are considered.
Comparison of IBIS with other protein-protein interaction prediction methods.
| Method | Chains | Np | Nc | Nt | Precision avg (%) | Recall avg (%) |
|
| 146 | 4489 | 3133 | 4348 | 69.7 | 72.0 |
|
| 146 | 2676 | 1873 | 4348 | 72.7 | 43.0 |
|
| 145 | 4271 | 2683 | 5319 | 62.8 | 50.4 |
Here Np and Nc represent the number of total and correctly predicted binding site residues respectively. Nt is the number of true binding site residues. HomPPI was queried using the test set of 188 chains. Note that IBIS was able to make predictions for only 146 chains, as for the remaining 25 cases there were no homologous structural complexes above the 30% identity cutoff. For these 25 cases we considered the number of correctly predicted binding site residues to be zero penalizing the estimated IBIS accuracy even though by definition IBIS could not provide predictions for these cases.
Figure 4Binding sites between Fe-protein and MoFe-protein.
Binding sites inferred on α (a) and β (b) subunits of MoFe protein, PDB chain 1MIO_A and 1MIO_B respectively. Two helical regions assumed to be critical for interaction are shown in magenta. Binding site residues are shown by side chains (in red color) and match with residues predicted by Kim at al. Binding site residues shown in yellow on α subunit (1MIO_A) are part of inserted 50 residues sequence and are not predicted by IBIS.