| Literature DB >> 26297553 |
Cecilia Blikstad1, Ylva Ivarsson2.
Abstract
Interactions between modular domains and short linear motifs (3-10 amino acids peptide stretches) are crucial for cell signaling. The motifs typically reside in the disordered regions of the proteome and the interactions are often transient, allowing for rapid changes in response to changing stimuli. The properties that make domain-motif interactions suitable for cell signaling also make them difficult to capture experimentally and they are therefore largely underrepresented in the known protein-protein interaction networks. Most of the knowledge on domain-motif interactions is derived from low-throughput studies, although there exist dedicated high-throughput methods for the identification of domain-motif interactions. The methods include arrays of peptides or proteins, display of peptides on phage or yeast, and yeast-two-hybrid experiments. We here provide a survey of scalable methods for domain-motif interaction profiling. These methods have frequently been applied to a limited number of ubiquitous domain families. It is now time to apply them to a broader set of peptide binding proteins, to provide a comprehensive picture of the linear motifs in the human proteome and to link them to their potential binding partners. Despite the plethora of methods, it is still a challenge for most approaches to identify interactions that rely on post-translational modification or context dependent or conditional interactions, suggesting directions for further method development.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26297553 PMCID: PMC4546347 DOI: 10.1186/s12964-015-0116-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1478-811X Impact factor: 5.712
Examples of interactions between modular domains and linear motifs
| Protein | Domain | Consensus motif | Target protein/binding peptide | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GRB2 | SH2 | pY-x-(E/N) | ERBB3/pYMN | Ras signaling | [ |
| GRB2 | SH3 | P-x-x-P-x-(R/K) | SOS1/PPVPPR | Ras signaling | [ |
| SUMO1 | SUMO | (V/I/L)-(V/I/L)-(D/E)-(V/I/L) | PIAS1/VIDL | Sumoylation | [ |
| SDCBP | PDZ | Φ-x-Φ-coo- | SDC1/EFYA-coo- | Trafficking | [ |
| YAP1 | WW | PP-x-Y | TP73/PPPY | Transcriptional regulation | [ |
“Φ” indicates a hydrophic residue and “x” any amino acid
Fig. 1Schematic representation of discussed techniques for the identification of motif-based interactions. Orange represents target protein; blue hexagon represents a binding motif; yellow, green and purple represent non-binding sequences peptides. Pink star represent a detection signal e.g. fluorescence. a Peptide microarray: Peptides with known sequences are synthesized on a solid support, incubated with the target protein and interactions are detected with specific antibodies or labeled target protein. b Protein array: A selection of different purified proteins are spotted on a solid support and incubated with a labeled peptide. c Peptide phage-display: Bait protein is immobilized and used in selections against a peptide phage library. Unbound phage particles are washed away, bound phage eluted and amplified, and used for repeated rounds of selections. Enriched binding clones are sequenced. d Yeast surface display: A library of peptides are displayed on the surface of yeast cells and incubated with a target protein. The target protein is labeled with a fluorescent tag and the cells are sorted based on peptide binding using FACS. Sorted pools are sequenced. e Yeast-two-hybrid: The binding domain (BD) of a transcription factor is linked to the target protein and the activation domain (AD) of the same transcription factor is linked to a peptide. If the protein and peptide interact BD and AD are brought together and the transcription factor reconstituted. This activates the transcription of a reporter gene
Overview of discussed methods for identification and characterization of motif based interactions
| Method | Peptide library size | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Combinatorial phage display | 1010 | Library size | No PTMs, various biases |
| ProP-PD | 104–-106 | Unbiased | No PTMs |
| Yeast surface display | 108 | Some PTMs, unbiased | Limited library size |
| Peptide array | 102 – 103 | PTMs, semi-quantitative | Limited coverage |
| Biased library | |||
| Cost of materials | |||
| High-density array | 105 – 106 | Coverage | Cost of materials |
| Protein microarray | 10–100 s | Semi-quantitative | Protein stability |
| Labor intense set-up | |||
| Y2H | 106 | Low tech | No PTMs |