» Articles » PMID: 17630824

Protein-protein Interaction Hotspots Carved into Sequences

Overview
Specialty Biology
Date 2007 Jul 17
PMID 17630824
Citations 110
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Protein-protein interactions, a key to almost any biological process, are mediated by molecular mechanisms that are not entirely clear. The study of these mechanisms often focuses on all residues at protein-protein interfaces. However, only a small subset of all interface residues is actually essential for recognition or binding. Commonly referred to as "hotspots," these essential residues are defined as residues that impede protein-protein interactions if mutated. While no in silico tool identifies hotspots in unbound chains, numerous prediction methods were designed to identify all the residues in a protein that are likely to be a part of protein-protein interfaces. These methods typically identify successfully only a small fraction of all interface residues. Here, we analyzed the hypothesis that the two subsets correspond (i.e., that in silico methods may predict few residues because they preferentially predict hotspots). We demonstrate that this is indeed the case and that we can therefore predict directly from the sequence of a single protein which residues are interaction hotspots (without knowledge of the interaction partner). Our results suggested that most protein complexes are stabilized by similar basic principles. The ability to accurately and efficiently identify hotspots from sequence enables the annotation and analysis of protein-protein interaction hotspots in entire organisms and thus may benefit function prediction and drug development. The server for prediction is available at http://www.rostlab.org/services/isis.

Citing Articles

PPI-hotspot for detecting protein-protein interaction hot spots from the free protein structure.

Chen Y, Sargsyan K, Wright J, Chen Y, Huang Y, Lim C Elife. 2024; 13.

PMID: 39283314 PMC: 11405013. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.96643.


Intracellular delivery of Parkin-RING0-based fragments corrects Parkin-induced mitochondrial dysfunction through interaction with SLP-2.

Zanon A, Guida M, Lavdas A, Corti C, Castelo Rueda M, Negro A J Transl Med. 2024; 22(1):59.

PMID: 38229174 PMC: 10790385. DOI: 10.1186/s12967-024-04850-3.


Overcoming phenotypic switching: targeting protein-protein interactions in cancer.

Ladias C, Papakotoulas P, Papaioannou M, Papanikolaou N Explor Target Antitumor Ther. 2023; 4(5):1071-1081.

PMID: 38023990 PMC: 10651353. DOI: 10.37349/etat.2023.00181.


Enabling technology and core theory of synthetic biology.

Zhang X, Liu C, Dai J, Yuan Y, Gao C, Feng Y Sci China Life Sci. 2023; 66(8):1742-1785.

PMID: 36753021 PMC: 9907219. DOI: 10.1007/s11427-022-2214-2.


Deep mutational scanning and machine learning reveal structural and molecular rules governing allosteric hotspots in homologous proteins.

Leander M, Liu Z, Cui Q, Raman S Elife. 2022; 11.

PMID: 36226916 PMC: 9662819. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.79932.


References
1.
Wells J . Systematic mutational analyses of protein-protein interfaces. Methods Enzymol. 1991; 202:390-411. DOI: 10.1016/0076-6879(91)02020-a. View

2.
Jones S, Thornton J . Prediction of protein-protein interaction sites using patch analysis. J Mol Biol. 1997; 272(1):133-43. DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1997.1233. View

3.
Schneider R, Sander C . The HSSP database of protein structure-sequence alignments. Nucleic Acids Res. 1996; 24(1):201-5. PMC: 145595. DOI: 10.1093/nar/24.1.201. View

4.
Reichmann D, Rahat O, Albeck S, Meged R, Dym O, Schreiber G . The modular architecture of protein-protein binding interfaces. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004; 102(1):57-62. PMC: 544062. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0407280102. View

5.
Halperin I, Wolfson H, Nussinov R . Protein-protein interactions; coupling of structurally conserved residues and of hot spots across interfaces. Implications for docking. Structure. 2004; 12(6):1027-38. DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2004.04.009. View