1. I’m Walking into Spiderwebs: Making Sense of Protein–Protein Interaction Data
- Author
-
Skawinski, Chase LS and Shah, Priya S
- Subjects
Analytical Chemistry ,Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Chemical Sciences ,Biotechnology ,Proteomics ,Humans ,Mass Spectrometry ,Protein Interaction Mapping ,Female ,Protein Interaction Maps ,Proteins ,protein-protein interactions ,mass spectrometry ,proteomic scoring ,protein−protein interactions ,Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ,Biological sciences ,Chemical sciences - Abstract
Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) are at the heart of the molecular landscape permeating life. Proteomics studies can explore this protein interaction landscape using mass spectrometry (MS). Thanks to their high sensitivity, mass spectrometers can easily identify thousands of proteins within a single sample, but that same sensitivity generates tangled spiderwebs of data that hide biologically relevant findings. So, what does a researcher do when she finds herself walking into spiderwebs? In a field focused on discovery, MS data require rigor in their analysis, experimental validation, or a combination of both. In this Review, we provide a brief primer on MS-based experimental methods to identify PPIs. We discuss approaches to analyze the resulting data and remove the proteomic background. We consider the advantages between comprehensive and targeted studies. We also discuss how scoring might be improved through AI-based protein structure information. Women have been essential to the development of proteomics, so we will specifically highlight work by women that has made this field thrive in recent years.
- Published
- 2024