| Literature DB >> 23947337 |
Yu-Chao Wang1, Che Lin, Ming-Ta Chuang, Wen-Ping Hsieh, Chung-Yu Lan, Yung-Jen Chuang, Bor-Sen Chen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite clinical research and development in the last decades, infectious diseases remain a top global problem in public health today, being responsible for millions of morbidities and mortalities each year. Therefore, many studies have sought to investigate host-pathogen interactions from various viewpoints in attempts to understand pathogenic and defensive mechanisms, which could help control pathogenic infections. However, most of these efforts have focused predominately on the host or the pathogen individually rather than on a simultaneous analysis of both interaction partners.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23947337 PMCID: PMC3751520 DOI: 10.1186/1752-0509-7-79
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Syst Biol ISSN: 1752-0509
Figure 1Schematic overview of the interspecies protein-protein interaction network construction framework. Protein-protein interaction (PPI) data from the BioGRID database, ortholog information from CGD, ZFIN, InParanoid, and simultaneous time-course microarray data for both C. albicans and zebrafish during C. albicans-zebrafish interactions were used for interspecies PPI network construction. On the basis of the PPI data for S. cerevisiae and H. sapiens and the ortholog information among these related species, putative interspecies and intracellular PPIs were inferred, which constitute the candidate interspecies network. Then, using multivariate dynamic modeling of regulatory responses and simultaneously quantified microarray data, the regulatory abilities were identified, and the significant interactions determined. In this manner, the candidate interspecies network was pruned to construct the refined host-pathogen interspecies PPI network. In the candidate interspecies network and the refined host-pathogen interspecies PPI network, yellow and pink nodes indicate C. albicans and zebrafish proteins, where blue, green, and grey edges denote C. albicans intracellular interactions, zebrafish intracellular interactions, and interspecies interactions, respectively.
Figure 2The constructed -zebrafish interspecies protein-protein interaction network. There were 371 interspecies interactions, 3,504 C. albicans intracellular interactions, and 35 zebrafish intracellular interactions among 1,127 C. albicans proteins and 87 zebrafish proteins in the constructed interspecies network [see Additional file 1]. Representation of color nodes and edges are the same as in Figure 1. The figure was created by Cytoscape [35] and the protein names were omitted for simplicity.
Figure 3The interspecies subnetwork for pathogenesis proteins. This figure indicates the C. albicans pathogenesis subnetwork extracted from the interspecies PPI network in Figure 2. The 24 zebrafish proteins interacting with C. albicans pathogenesis proteins (purple shadow) were found to be statistically enriched with proteins annotated with oxidation-reduction process (yellow shadow) (p < 0.01), highlighting the association between C. albicans pathogenesis and the zebrafish redox process. The intracellular protein interactions for both C. albicans and zebrafish were omitted for simplicity.