The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.

Infectious diseases result in millions of deaths each year. Mechanisms of infection have been studied in detail for many pathogens. However, many questions are relatively unexplored. What are the properties of human proteins that interact with pathogens? Do pathogens interact with certain functional...

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Main Authors: Matthew D Dyer, T M Murali, Bruno W Sobral
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-02-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2242834?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-30f578da5208419a9e6558fc10077fa72020-11-25T01:12:34ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742008-02-0142e3210.1371/journal.ppat.0040032The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.Matthew D DyerT M MuraliBruno W SobralInfectious diseases result in millions of deaths each year. Mechanisms of infection have been studied in detail for many pathogens. However, many questions are relatively unexplored. What are the properties of human proteins that interact with pathogens? Do pathogens interact with certain functional classes of human proteins? Which infection mechanisms and pathways are commonly triggered by multiple pathogens? In this paper, to our knowledge, we provide the first study of the landscape of human proteins interacting with pathogens. We integrate human-pathogen protein-protein interactions (PPIs) for 190 pathogen strains from seven public databases. Nearly all of the 10,477 human-pathogen PPIs are for viral systems (98.3%), with the majority belonging to the human-HIV system (77.9%). We find that both viral and bacterial pathogens tend to interact with hubs (proteins with many interacting partners) and bottlenecks (proteins that are central to many paths in the network) in the human PPI network. We construct separate sets of human proteins interacting with bacterial pathogens, viral pathogens, and those interacting with multiple bacteria and with multiple viruses. Gene Ontology functions enriched in these sets reveal a number of processes, such as cell cycle regulation, nuclear transport, and immune response that participate in interactions with different pathogens. Our results provide the first global view of strategies used by pathogens to subvert human cellular processes and infect human cells. Supplementary data accompanying this paper is available at http://staff.vbi.vt.edu/dyermd/publications/dyer2008a.html.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2242834?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew D Dyer
T M Murali
Bruno W Sobral
spellingShingle Matthew D Dyer
T M Murali
Bruno W Sobral
The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Matthew D Dyer
T M Murali
Bruno W Sobral
author_sort Matthew D Dyer
title The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.
title_short The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.
title_full The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.
title_fullStr The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.
title_full_unstemmed The landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.
title_sort landscape of human proteins interacting with viruses and other pathogens.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2008-02-01
description Infectious diseases result in millions of deaths each year. Mechanisms of infection have been studied in detail for many pathogens. However, many questions are relatively unexplored. What are the properties of human proteins that interact with pathogens? Do pathogens interact with certain functional classes of human proteins? Which infection mechanisms and pathways are commonly triggered by multiple pathogens? In this paper, to our knowledge, we provide the first study of the landscape of human proteins interacting with pathogens. We integrate human-pathogen protein-protein interactions (PPIs) for 190 pathogen strains from seven public databases. Nearly all of the 10,477 human-pathogen PPIs are for viral systems (98.3%), with the majority belonging to the human-HIV system (77.9%). We find that both viral and bacterial pathogens tend to interact with hubs (proteins with many interacting partners) and bottlenecks (proteins that are central to many paths in the network) in the human PPI network. We construct separate sets of human proteins interacting with bacterial pathogens, viral pathogens, and those interacting with multiple bacteria and with multiple viruses. Gene Ontology functions enriched in these sets reveal a number of processes, such as cell cycle regulation, nuclear transport, and immune response that participate in interactions with different pathogens. Our results provide the first global view of strategies used by pathogens to subvert human cellular processes and infect human cells. Supplementary data accompanying this paper is available at http://staff.vbi.vt.edu/dyermd/publications/dyer2008a.html.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2242834?pdf=render
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