| Literature DB >> 26771498 |
Tommy V Vo1, Jishnu Das2, Michael J Meyer3, Nicolas A Cordero4, Nurten Akturk4, Xiaomu Wei5, Benjamin J Fair6, Andrew G Degatano4, Robert Fragoza1, Lisa G Liu4, Akihisa Matsuyama7, Michelle Trickey8, Sachi Horibata9, Andrew Grimson6, Hiroyuki Yamano8, Minoru Yoshida7, Frederick P Roth10, Jeffrey A Pleiss6, Yu Xia11, Haiyuan Yu12.
Abstract
Here, we present FissionNet, a proteome-wide binary protein interactome for S. pombe, comprising 2,278 high-quality interactions, of which ∼ 50% were previously not reported in any species. FissionNet unravels previously unreported interactions implicated in processes such as gene silencing and pre-mRNA splicing. We developed a rigorous network comparison framework that accounts for assay sensitivity and specificity, revealing extensive species-specific network rewiring between fission yeast, budding yeast, and human. Surprisingly, although genes are better conserved between the yeasts, S. pombe interactions are significantly better conserved in human than in S. cerevisiae. Our framework also reveals that different modes of gene duplication influence the extent to which paralogous proteins are functionally repurposed. Finally, cross-species interactome mapping demonstrates that coevolution of interacting proteins is remarkably prevalent, a result with important implications for studying human disease in model organisms. Overall, FissionNet is a valuable resource for understanding protein functions and their evolution.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26771498 PMCID: PMC4715267 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.11.037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582