| Literature DB >> 32589946 |
Erik Verschueren1, Bushra Husain2, Kobe Yuen3, Yi Sun4, Sairupa Paduchuri5, Yasin Senbabaoglu6, Isabelle Lehoux7, Tia A Arena8, Blair Wilson9, Steve Lianoglou10, Corey Bakalarski2, Yvonne Franke7, Pamela Chan9, Athena W Wong8, Lino C Gonzalez11, Sanjeev Mariathasan3, Shannon J Turley12, Jennie R Lill2, Nadia Martinez-Martin13.
Abstract
Cell surface receptors and their interactions play a central role in physiological and pathological signaling. Despite its clinical relevance, the immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF) remains uncharacterized and underrepresented in databases. Here, we present a systematic extracellular protein map, the IgSF interactome. Using a high-throughput technology to interrogate most single transmembrane receptors for binding to 445 IgSF proteins, we identify over 500 interactions, 82% previously undocumented, and confirm more than 60 receptor-ligand pairs using orthogonal assays. Our study reveals a map of cell-type-specific interactions and the landscape of dysregulated receptor-ligand crosstalk in cancer, including selective loss of function for tumor-associated mutations. Furthermore, investigation of the IgSF interactome in a large cohort of cancer patients identifies interacting protein signatures associated with clinical outcome. The IgSF interactome represents an important resource to fuel biological discoveries and a framework for understanding the functional organization of the surfaceome during homeostasis and disease, ultimately informing therapeutic development.Entities:
Keywords: cancer networks; cell surface; extracellular interactome; immunoglobulin superfamily; receptor-ligand interactions
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32589946 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.06.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582