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      Annotation transfer between genomes: protein-protein interologs and protein-DNA regulogs.

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          Abstract

          Proteins function mainly through interactions, especially with DNA and other proteins. While some large-scale interaction networks are now available for a number of model organisms, their experimental generation remains difficult. Consequently, interolog mapping--the transfer of interaction annotation from one organism to another using comparative genomics--is of significant value. Here we quantitatively assess the degree to which interologs can be reliably transferred between species as a function of the sequence similarity of the corresponding interacting proteins. Using interaction information from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster, and Helicobacter pylori, we find that protein-protein interactions can be transferred when a pair of proteins has a joint sequence identity >80% or a joint E-value <10(-70). (These "joint" quantities are the geometric means of the identities or E-values for the two pairs of interacting proteins.) We generalize our interolog analysis to protein-DNA binding, finding such interactions are conserved at specific thresholds between 30% and 60% sequence identity depending on the protein family. Furthermore, we introduce the concept of a "regulog"--a conserved regulatory relationship between proteins across different species. We map interologs and regulogs from yeast to a number of genomes with limited experimental annotation (e.g., Arabidopsis thaliana) and make these available through an online database at http://interolog.gersteinlab.org. Specifically, we are able to transfer approximately 90,000 potential protein-protein interactions to the worm. We test a number of these in two-hybrid experiments and are able to verify 45 overlaps, which we show to be statistically significant.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Genome Res
          Genome research
          Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
          1088-9051
          1088-9051
          Jun 2004
          : 14
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA.
          Article
          14/6/1107
          10.1101/gr.1774904
          419789
          15173116
          f013d6b0-d946-483b-ab45-d98163f8bb41
          Copyright 2004 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
          History

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