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Bhak, Jong
KOrean GenomIcs Center
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Mapping protein family interactions: Intramolecular and intermolecular protein family interaction repertoires in the PDB and yeast

Alternative Title
Mapping protein family interactions: intramolecular and intermolecular protein family interaction repertoires
Author(s)
Bhak, Jong HwaLappe, MichaelTeichmann, Sarah A.
Issued Date
2001-03
DOI
10.1006/jmbi.2001.4526
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/13249
Fulltext
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022283601945267
Citation
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, v.307, no.3, pp.929 - 938
Abstract
In the postgenomic era, one of the most interesting and important challenges is to understand protein interactions on a large scale. The physical interactions between protein domains are fundamental to the workings of a cell: in multi-domain polypeptide chains, in multi-subunit proteins and in transient complexes between proteins that also exist independently. To study the large-scale patterns and evolution of interactions between protein domains, we view interactions between protein domains in terms of the interactions between structural families of evolutionarily related domains. This allows us to classify 8151 interactions betu een individual domains in the Protein Data Bank and the yeast Saccharromyces cerevisiae in terms of 664 types of interactions, between protein families. At least 51 interactions do not occur in the Protein Data Bank and can only be derived from the yeast data. The map of interactions between protein families has the form of a scale-free network, meaning that most protein families only interact with one or two other families, while a few families are extremely versatile in their interactions and are connected to many families. We observe that almost half of all known families engage in interactions with domains from their own family. We also see that the repertoires of interactions of domains within and between polypeptide chains overlap mostly for two specific types of protein families: enzymes and same-family interactions. This suggests that different types of protein interaction repertoires exist for structural, functional and regulatory reasons. (C) 2001 Academic Press
Publisher
ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
ISSN
0022-2836

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