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Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome

BACKGROUND: We have initiated an effort to exhaustively map interactions between HTLV-1 Tax and host cellular proteins. The resulting Tax interactome will have significant utility toward defining new and understanding known activities of this important viral protein. In addition, the completion of a...

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Autores principales: Ramadan, Emad, Ward, Michael, Guo, Xin, Durkin, Sarah S, Sawyer, Adam, Vilela, Marcelo, Osgood, Christopher, Pothen, Alex, Semmes, Oliver J
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2576351/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18922151
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-5-92
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author Ramadan, Emad
Ward, Michael
Guo, Xin
Durkin, Sarah S
Sawyer, Adam
Vilela, Marcelo
Osgood, Christopher
Pothen, Alex
Semmes, Oliver J
author_facet Ramadan, Emad
Ward, Michael
Guo, Xin
Durkin, Sarah S
Sawyer, Adam
Vilela, Marcelo
Osgood, Christopher
Pothen, Alex
Semmes, Oliver J
author_sort Ramadan, Emad
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We have initiated an effort to exhaustively map interactions between HTLV-1 Tax and host cellular proteins. The resulting Tax interactome will have significant utility toward defining new and understanding known activities of this important viral protein. In addition, the completion of a full Tax interactome will also help shed light upon the functional consequences of these myriad Tax activities. The physical mapping process involved the affinity isolation of Tax complexes followed by sequence identification using tandem mass spectrometry. To date we have mapped 250 cellular components within this interactome. Here we present our approach to prioritizing these interactions via an in silico culling process. RESULTS: We first constructed an in silico Tax interactome comprised of 46 literature-confirmed protein-protein interactions. This number was then reduced to four Tax-interactions suspected to play a role in DNA damage response (Rad51, TOP1, Chk2, 53BP1). The first-neighbor and second-neighbor interactions of these four proteins were assembled from available human protein interaction databases. Through an analysis of betweenness and closeness centrality measures, and numbers of interactions, we ranked proteins in the first neighborhood. When this rank list was compared to the list of physical Tax-binding proteins, DNA-PK was the highest ranked protein common to both lists. An overlapping clustering of the Tax-specific second-neighborhood protein network showed DNA-PK to be one of three bridge proteins that link multiple clusters in the DNA damage response network. CONCLUSION: The interaction of Tax with DNA-PK represents an important biological paradigm as suggested via consensus findings in vivo and in silico. We present this methodology as an approach to discovery and as a means of validating components of a consensus Tax interactome.
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spelling pubmed-25763512008-10-31 Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome Ramadan, Emad Ward, Michael Guo, Xin Durkin, Sarah S Sawyer, Adam Vilela, Marcelo Osgood, Christopher Pothen, Alex Semmes, Oliver J Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: We have initiated an effort to exhaustively map interactions between HTLV-1 Tax and host cellular proteins. The resulting Tax interactome will have significant utility toward defining new and understanding known activities of this important viral protein. In addition, the completion of a full Tax interactome will also help shed light upon the functional consequences of these myriad Tax activities. The physical mapping process involved the affinity isolation of Tax complexes followed by sequence identification using tandem mass spectrometry. To date we have mapped 250 cellular components within this interactome. Here we present our approach to prioritizing these interactions via an in silico culling process. RESULTS: We first constructed an in silico Tax interactome comprised of 46 literature-confirmed protein-protein interactions. This number was then reduced to four Tax-interactions suspected to play a role in DNA damage response (Rad51, TOP1, Chk2, 53BP1). The first-neighbor and second-neighbor interactions of these four proteins were assembled from available human protein interaction databases. Through an analysis of betweenness and closeness centrality measures, and numbers of interactions, we ranked proteins in the first neighborhood. When this rank list was compared to the list of physical Tax-binding proteins, DNA-PK was the highest ranked protein common to both lists. An overlapping clustering of the Tax-specific second-neighborhood protein network showed DNA-PK to be one of three bridge proteins that link multiple clusters in the DNA damage response network. CONCLUSION: The interaction of Tax with DNA-PK represents an important biological paradigm as suggested via consensus findings in vivo and in silico. We present this methodology as an approach to discovery and as a means of validating components of a consensus Tax interactome. BioMed Central 2008-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2576351/ /pubmed/18922151 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-5-92 Text en Copyright © 2008 Ramadan et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Ramadan, Emad
Ward, Michael
Guo, Xin
Durkin, Sarah S
Sawyer, Adam
Vilela, Marcelo
Osgood, Christopher
Pothen, Alex
Semmes, Oliver J
Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome
title Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome
title_full Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome
title_fullStr Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome
title_full_unstemmed Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome
title_short Physical and in silico approaches identify DNA-PK in a Tax DNA-damage response interactome
title_sort physical and in silico approaches identify dna-pk in a tax dna-damage response interactome
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2576351/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18922151
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-5-92
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