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Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map

Following recent advances in high-throughput mass spectrometry (MS)–based proteomics, the numbers of identified phosphoproteins and their phosphosites have greatly increased in a wide variety of organisms. Although a critical role of phosphorylation is control of protein signaling, our understanding...

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Autores principales: Yachie, Nozomu, Saito, Rintaro, Sugiyama, Naoyuki, Tomita, Masaru, Ishihama, Yasushi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3029238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21298081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1001064
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author Yachie, Nozomu
Saito, Rintaro
Sugiyama, Naoyuki
Tomita, Masaru
Ishihama, Yasushi
author_facet Yachie, Nozomu
Saito, Rintaro
Sugiyama, Naoyuki
Tomita, Masaru
Ishihama, Yasushi
author_sort Yachie, Nozomu
collection PubMed
description Following recent advances in high-throughput mass spectrometry (MS)–based proteomics, the numbers of identified phosphoproteins and their phosphosites have greatly increased in a wide variety of organisms. Although a critical role of phosphorylation is control of protein signaling, our understanding of the phosphoproteome remains limited. Here, we report unexpected, large-scale connections revealed between the phosphoproteome and protein interactome by integrative data-mining of yeast multi-omics data. First, new phosphoproteome data on yeast cells were obtained by MS-based proteomics and unified with publicly available yeast phosphoproteome data. This revealed that nearly 60% of ∼6,000 yeast genes encode phosphoproteins. We mapped these unified phosphoproteome data on a yeast protein–protein interaction (PPI) network with other yeast multi-omics datasets containing information about proteome abundance, proteome disorders, literature-derived signaling reactomes, and in vitro substratomes of kinases. In the phospho-PPI, phosphoproteins had more interacting partners than nonphosphoproteins, implying that a large fraction of intracellular protein interaction patterns (including those of protein complex formation) is affected by reversible and alternative phosphorylation reactions. Although highly abundant or unstructured proteins have a high chance of both interacting with other proteins and being phosphorylated within cells, the difference between the number counts of interacting partners of phosphoproteins and nonphosphoproteins was significant independently of protein abundance and disorder level. Moreover, analysis of the phospho-PPI and yeast signaling reactome data suggested that co-phosphorylation of interacting proteins by single kinases is common within cells. These multi-omics analyses illuminate how wide-ranging intracellular phosphorylation events and the diversity of physical protein interactions are largely affected by each other.
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spelling pubmed-30292382011-02-04 Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map Yachie, Nozomu Saito, Rintaro Sugiyama, Naoyuki Tomita, Masaru Ishihama, Yasushi PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Following recent advances in high-throughput mass spectrometry (MS)–based proteomics, the numbers of identified phosphoproteins and their phosphosites have greatly increased in a wide variety of organisms. Although a critical role of phosphorylation is control of protein signaling, our understanding of the phosphoproteome remains limited. Here, we report unexpected, large-scale connections revealed between the phosphoproteome and protein interactome by integrative data-mining of yeast multi-omics data. First, new phosphoproteome data on yeast cells were obtained by MS-based proteomics and unified with publicly available yeast phosphoproteome data. This revealed that nearly 60% of ∼6,000 yeast genes encode phosphoproteins. We mapped these unified phosphoproteome data on a yeast protein–protein interaction (PPI) network with other yeast multi-omics datasets containing information about proteome abundance, proteome disorders, literature-derived signaling reactomes, and in vitro substratomes of kinases. In the phospho-PPI, phosphoproteins had more interacting partners than nonphosphoproteins, implying that a large fraction of intracellular protein interaction patterns (including those of protein complex formation) is affected by reversible and alternative phosphorylation reactions. Although highly abundant or unstructured proteins have a high chance of both interacting with other proteins and being phosphorylated within cells, the difference between the number counts of interacting partners of phosphoproteins and nonphosphoproteins was significant independently of protein abundance and disorder level. Moreover, analysis of the phospho-PPI and yeast signaling reactome data suggested that co-phosphorylation of interacting proteins by single kinases is common within cells. These multi-omics analyses illuminate how wide-ranging intracellular phosphorylation events and the diversity of physical protein interactions are largely affected by each other. Public Library of Science 2011-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3029238/ /pubmed/21298081 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1001064 Text en Yachie et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yachie, Nozomu
Saito, Rintaro
Sugiyama, Naoyuki
Tomita, Masaru
Ishihama, Yasushi
Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map
title Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map
title_full Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map
title_fullStr Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map
title_full_unstemmed Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map
title_short Integrative Features of the Yeast Phosphoproteome and Protein–Protein Interaction Map
title_sort integrative features of the yeast phosphoproteome and protein–protein interaction map
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3029238/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21298081
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1001064
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