Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein Interactions

Since ancient times, even in today's modern world, infectious diseases cause lots of people to die. Infectious organisms, pathogens, cause diseases by physical interactions with human proteins. A thorough analysis of these interspecies interactions is required to provide insights about infectio...

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Main Authors: Saliha eDurmus Tekir, Tunahan eCakir, Kutlu eUlgen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Microbiology
Subjects:
Hub
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2012.00046/full
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spelling doaj-a39f4b2d95fd4a5b9f5a62bc90e90b092020-11-24T22:52:51ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2012-02-01310.3389/fmicb.2012.0004620384Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein InteractionsSaliha eDurmus Tekir0Tunahan eCakir1Kutlu eUlgen2Bogazici UniversityGebze Institute of TechnologyBogazici UniversitySince ancient times, even in today's modern world, infectious diseases cause lots of people to die. Infectious organisms, pathogens, cause diseases by physical interactions with human proteins. A thorough analysis of these interspecies interactions is required to provide insights about infection strategies of pathogens. Here we analyzed the most comprehensive available pathogen-human protein interaction data including 23,435 interactions, targeting 5,210 human proteins. The data were obtained from the newly developed pathogen-host interaction database, PHISTO. This is the first comprehensive attempt to get a comparison between bacterial and viral infections since the bacterial data have been scarce until the last few years. We investigated human proteins that are targeted by bacteria and viruses to provide an overview of common and special infection strategies used by these different pathogen types. We observed that in the human PPI network the proteins targeted by pathogens have higher connectivity and betweenness centrality values than proteins not interacting with pathogens. The preference of interacting hub and bottleneck proteins is found to be a common infection strategy of all types of pathogens to manipulate human essential mechanisms. Specifically viruses tend to interact with human proteins of much higher connectivity and centrality values in the human protein network than bacteria. Gene Ontology enrichment analysis of the human proteins targeted by pathogens indicates crucial clues about the infection mechanisms of bacteria and viruses. Bacteria interact with human proteins that are enriched in immune response to disrupt human defense mechanisms whereas viruses manipulate human cellular processes in order to use that transcriptional machinery for their own genetic material transcription. As a novel observation about pathogen-human systems, the human proteins targeted by both pathogens are shown to be enriched in the regulation of metabolic processes.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2012.00046/fullBottleneckgene ontologyHubInfection strategyPathogen-human protein-protein interactionsPHISTO
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saliha eDurmus Tekir
Tunahan eCakir
Kutlu eUlgen
spellingShingle Saliha eDurmus Tekir
Tunahan eCakir
Kutlu eUlgen
Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein Interactions
Frontiers in Microbiology
Bottleneck
gene ontology
Hub
Infection strategy
Pathogen-human protein-protein interactions
PHISTO
author_facet Saliha eDurmus Tekir
Tunahan eCakir
Kutlu eUlgen
author_sort Saliha eDurmus Tekir
title Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein Interactions
title_short Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein Interactions
title_full Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein Interactions
title_fullStr Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein Interactions
title_full_unstemmed Infection Strategies of Bacterial and Viral Pathogens through Pathogen-Human Protein-Protein Interactions
title_sort infection strategies of bacterial and viral pathogens through pathogen-human protein-protein interactions
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Microbiology
issn 1664-302X
publishDate 2012-02-01
description Since ancient times, even in today's modern world, infectious diseases cause lots of people to die. Infectious organisms, pathogens, cause diseases by physical interactions with human proteins. A thorough analysis of these interspecies interactions is required to provide insights about infection strategies of pathogens. Here we analyzed the most comprehensive available pathogen-human protein interaction data including 23,435 interactions, targeting 5,210 human proteins. The data were obtained from the newly developed pathogen-host interaction database, PHISTO. This is the first comprehensive attempt to get a comparison between bacterial and viral infections since the bacterial data have been scarce until the last few years. We investigated human proteins that are targeted by bacteria and viruses to provide an overview of common and special infection strategies used by these different pathogen types. We observed that in the human PPI network the proteins targeted by pathogens have higher connectivity and betweenness centrality values than proteins not interacting with pathogens. The preference of interacting hub and bottleneck proteins is found to be a common infection strategy of all types of pathogens to manipulate human essential mechanisms. Specifically viruses tend to interact with human proteins of much higher connectivity and centrality values in the human protein network than bacteria. Gene Ontology enrichment analysis of the human proteins targeted by pathogens indicates crucial clues about the infection mechanisms of bacteria and viruses. Bacteria interact with human proteins that are enriched in immune response to disrupt human defense mechanisms whereas viruses manipulate human cellular processes in order to use that transcriptional machinery for their own genetic material transcription. As a novel observation about pathogen-human systems, the human proteins targeted by both pathogens are shown to be enriched in the regulation of metabolic processes.
topic Bottleneck
gene ontology
Hub
Infection strategy
Pathogen-human protein-protein interactions
PHISTO
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2012.00046/full
work_keys_str_mv AT salihaedurmustekir infectionstrategiesofbacterialandviralpathogensthroughpathogenhumanproteinproteininteractions
AT tunahanecakir infectionstrategiesofbacterialandviralpathogensthroughpathogenhumanproteinproteininteractions
AT kutlueulgen infectionstrategiesofbacterialandviralpathogensthroughpathogenhumanproteinproteininteractions
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