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Architecture of the human interactome defines protein communities and disease networks.

Authors :
Huttlin EL
Bruckner RJ
Paulo JA
Cannon JR
Ting L
Baltier K
Colby G
Gebreab F
Gygi MP
Parzen H
Szpyt J
Tam S
Zarraga G
Pontano-Vaites L
Swarup S
White AE
Schweppe DK
Rad R
Erickson BK
Obar RA
Guruharsha KG
Li K
Artavanis-Tsakonas S
Gygi SP
Harper JW
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2017 May 25; Vol. 545 (7655), pp. 505-509. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 May 17.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The physiology of a cell can be viewed as the product of thousands of proteins acting in concert to shape the cellular response. Coordination is achieved in part through networks of protein-protein interactions that assemble functionally related proteins into complexes, organelles, and signal transduction pathways. Understanding the architecture of the human proteome has the potential to inform cellular, structural, and evolutionary mechanisms and is critical to elucidating how genome variation contributes to disease. Here we present BioPlex 2.0 (Biophysical Interactions of ORFeome-derived complexes), which uses robust affinity purification-mass spectrometry methodology to elucidate protein interaction networks and co-complexes nucleated by more than 25% of protein-coding genes from the human genome, and constitutes, to our knowledge, the largest such network so far. With more than 56,000 candidate interactions, BioPlex 2.0 contains more than 29,000 previously unknown co-associations and provides functional insights into hundreds of poorly characterized proteins while enhancing network-based analyses of domain associations, subcellular localization, and co-complex formation. Unsupervised Markov clustering of interacting proteins identified more than 1,300 protein communities representing diverse cellular activities. Genes essential for cell fitness are enriched within 53 communities representing central cellular functions. Moreover, we identified 442 communities associated with more than 2,000 disease annotations, placing numerous candidate disease genes into a cellular framework. BioPlex 2.0 exceeds previous experimentally derived interaction networks in depth and breadth, and will be a valuable resource for exploring the biology of incompletely characterized proteins and for elucidating larger-scale patterns of proteome organization.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
545
Issue :
7655
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28514442
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature22366