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Functional organization of the yeast proteome by systematic analysis of protein complexes

Authors :
Angela Bauch
Tatjana Rudi
Bettina Huhse
Heinz Ruffner
Bernhard Kuster
Giulio Superti-Furga
Markus Bösche
Volker Gnau
Richard R. Copley
Bertrand Séraphin
Christina Leutwein
David Dickson
Jörg Schultz
Angela Edelmann
Malgorzata Schelder
Karin Klein
Roland Krause
Vladimir Rybin
Tewis Bouwmeester
Erich Querfurth
Gitte Neubauer
Martina Marzioch
Sonja Bastuck
Miro Brajenovic
Manfred Raida
Marie-Anne Heurtier
Manuela Hudak
Christian Höfert
Jens Rick
Anne-Claude Gavin
Anne-Marie Michon
Marita Remor
Gerard Drewes
Andreas Bauer
Alejandro Merino
Paola Grandi
Peer Bork
Cristina-Maria Cruciat
Source :
Nature, Vol. 415, No 6868 (2002) pp. 141-147
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Most cellular processes are carried out by multiprotein complexes. The identification and analysis of their components provides insight into how the ensemble of expressed proteins (proteome) is organized into functional units. We used tandem-affinity purification (TAP) and mass spectrometry in a large-scale approach to characterize multiprotein complexes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We processed 1,739 genes, including 1,143 human orthologues of relevance to human biology, and purified 589 protein assemblies. Bioinformatic analysis of these assemblies defined 232 distinct multiprotein complexes and proposed new cellular roles for 344 proteins, including 231 proteins with no previous functional annotation. Comparison of yeast and human complexes showed that conservation across species extends from single proteins to their molecular environment. Our analysis provides an outline of the eukaryotic proteome as a network of protein complexes at a level of organization beyond binary interactions. This higher-order map contains fundamental biological information and offers the context for a more reasoned and informed approach to drug discovery.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, Vol. 415, No 6868 (2002) pp. 141-147
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e02a527148538b6da1761bcfc2a71f47