1 / 48

Predicting PDZ domain protein-protein interactions from the genome

Predicting PDZ domain protein-protein interactions from the genome. Gary Bader Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research University of Toronto VanBUG, Vancouver, Jan.8.2009. http://baderlab.org. Computational Cell Map. Map the cell Predict map from genome

ania
Télécharger la présentation

Predicting PDZ domain protein-protein interactions from the genome

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Predicting PDZ domain protein-protein interactions from the genome Gary Bader Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research University of Toronto VanBUG, Vancouver, Jan.8.2009 http://baderlab.org

  2. Computational Cell Map • Map the cell • Predict map from genome • Multiple perturbation mapping • Active cell map • Map visualization and analysis software • Read map to understand • Cell processes • Gene function • Disease effects • Map evolution Cary MP et al. Pathway information… FEBS Lett. 2005 Bader GD et al. Functional genomics and proteomicsTrends Cell Biol. 2003

  3. How are biological networks in the cell encoded in the genome? Can we accurately predict biologically relevant interactions from a genome? How do genome sequence changes underlying disease affect the molecular network in the cell? Can we predict how well model pathways or phenotypes will translate to human? Can we design new networks de novo?

  4. Predicting Protein Interaction Networks From the Genome • Ideally: • Reality: • Not currently possible • Signaling pathways too divergent to accurately map by orthology • Protein interaction prediction likely as hard as protein folding, in general e.g. induced fit Accurately Predict

  5. Predicting Networks • Map via orthology relationships • Metabolic pathways • E.g. KEGG, BioCyc, metaSHARK • Protein-protein interactions • E.g. OPHID, HomoMINT • Signaling pathways • E.g. Reactome • Infer using functional associations • Phylogenetic profile, Rosetta Stone • Infer from molecular profiles • Gene expression  gene regulatory network • E.g. ARACNE, MEDUSA, MatrixREDUCE Pinney et al. NAR 2005 Bader & Enright

  6. Peptide Recognition Domains • Simple binding sites • Well studied • Numerous • Biologically important • Eukaryotic signaling systems often involve modular protein-protein interaction domains http://pawsonlab.mshri.on.ca/ http://nashlab.uchicago.edu/domains/

  7. Protein Domain Interaction Network Prediction Genome Gene and protein prediction Domain prediction Specificity prediction Protein-protein interaction prediction

  8. Protein Domain Interaction Network Prediction Genome Gene and protein prediction Domain prediction Specificity prediction Protein-protein interaction prediction

  9. 80-90 aa’s, 5-6 beta strands, 2 alpha helices Recognizehydrophobic C-termini Membrane localization of signaling components Neuronal development, cell polarity, ion channel regulation PDZ Domains C Dev Sidhu Par-6 PDZ Domain VKESLV-COOH (1RZX, Fly) Tonikian et al. PLoS Biology Sep.2008

  10. ~250 Human PDZ Domains Multiple sequence alignment

  11. ~250 Human PDZ Domains Multiple sequence alignment

  12. PDZ Binding Motifs Class 1: X[T/S]X C-Terminus Class 2: XX polar basic acidic hydrophobic

  13. Sequence Logo Position SWWPDSWV NAFEETWV NPFWDVWV NPFWDVWV SVDVDTWV -AYFDTWV STFLETWV KGVFESWV ESWHDSWV -GDQDTWV GRWMDTWV KFWRDTWL … Profile Logo Amino Acid polar=green, basic=blue, acidic=red, hydrophobic=black Schneider TD, Stephens RM. 1990. Nucleic Acids Res. 18:6097-6100 http://weblogo.berkeley.edu/

  14. 82 worm and human PDZ specificities mapped by phage display ~3100 peptides

  15. PDZ Specificity Map Class 2: XX Class 1: X[T/S]X

  16. PDZ Specificity Map Class 2: XX Class 3: X[D/X]X Class 4: XGX Class 1: X[T/S]X

  17. PDZ Specificity Map Class 2: XX Class 3: X[D/X]X 16 Classes Class 4: XGX Class 1: X[T/S]X

  18. Specificity at Most Positions

  19. Versatile Position Many Distinct Specificities

  20. Versatile and Robust 91 Erbin mutants phaged, 3400 peptides Mutations cause specificity switch, not function loss

  21. Conserved Specificity, Expanded Use PDZ domains are versatile, but only ~16 classes used from worm to human One billion years of evolution Model: specificities arose early, domains expanded under evolutionary constraints Raffi Tonikian

  22. Protein Domain Interaction Network Prediction Genome Gene and protein prediction Domain prediction Specificity prediction Protein-protein interaction prediction

  23. Predicting PDZ Specificity >ERBB2IP-1 RVRVEKDPELGFSISGGVGGRGNPFRPDDDGIFVTRVQPE GPASKLLQPGDKIIQANGYSFINIEHGQAVSLLKTFQNTVELII Tonikian et al. PDZ specificity map

  24. Sequence Predicts Specificity

  25. 50 mapped PDZ domains >70% similar to 69 unmapped PDZ Double coverage to 45% of worm/human 33 more PDZ groups 110 singletons Worm Human Mapped Unmapped

  26. Are Residues Correlated? ~80 ~3000 Boris Reva, Chris Sander

  27. Top 10 1-1 Rules

  28. Correlation Validation

  29. Prediction Can Be Accurate Experiment Prediction

  30. Challenge: But Not Always Experiment Prediction Shirley Hui

  31. Predicting PDZ Specificity Consider sequence and physicochemical properties high accuracy at matching known domains to peptides Test Examples (PDZ-Peptide Pairs) Predictions YES NO ? ? … Machine Learning … Training Examples (Binding and Non binding PDZ-Peptide Pairs) NO NO NO NO YES YES YES YES Negative: Positive: … … Shirley Hui, Xiaojian Shao

  32. Protein Domain Interaction Network Prediction Genome Gene and protein prediction Domain prediction Specificity prediction Protein-protein interaction prediction

  33. Genome Search Phage Results SWWPDSWV NAFEETWV NPFWDVWV NPFWDVWV SVDVDTWV -AYFDTWV STFLETWV KGVFESWV ESWHDSWV -GDQDTWV GRWMDTWV KFWRDTWL … Profile PDZ ERBIN polar=green, basic=blue, acidic=red, hydrophobic=black

  34. PDZ ERBIN Genome Search >Q86W91_HUMAN Plakophilin 4, isoform b ...LKSTTNYVDFYSTKRPSYRAEQYPGSPDSWV C-Terminal Match Score QYPGSPDSWV 5.5 DSWV Assumes: Position independence, uniform input, good sampling Physiological binder is similar to phage sequence Predicted C-Terminal Motif

  35. Prediction Can be Accurate ERBIN PDZ Interaction Prediction ERBB2IP-1 10E-5 (High) Probability of PDZ binding 10E-7 (Low) Known Interactor …but requires further experimental support High Score

  36. ...

  37. p-value Network of prioritized human PDZ interactions Matches known biology, significantly enriched in known interactors 8% overlap, p=8.6x10-18 336 interactions between 54 PDZ domains, 247 proteins

  38. Genome Future: In vivo Protein Interaction Prediction Biologically Relevant (In vivo) In vitro Peptides PDZ Evolutionary Context Protein Expression Phage Display Protein Function In silico Predictions Protein Structure Bind Network Context Protein Location DLGs NMDAR

  39. PDZ Human-Virus Interactions 89 viral proteins matched better than any human protein (vs. 30 domains) Affinities (ELISA) Yingnan Zhang

  40. Crtam Ig transmembrane protein important in late phase T cell activation Non SCRIB binding SCRIB Binding Crtam peptide inhibitor blocks SCRIB-3 binding and polarization T cell Synthetic viral peptide promotes T cell proliferation Non SCRIB binding SCRIB Binding Jung-Hua Yeh and Andrew Chan

  41. Conclusions • PDZ domains are highly specific, versatile and robust to mutation • Many specificities possible, but only a few are used • Specificity can be predicted from domain sequence • Prioritize predictions for experimental follow up • Use by pathogens • PDZ specificity map useful for: • Novel protein interaction discovery • Peptidomimetic therapeutic design • PDZ design (synthetic biology)

  42. Expert knowledge Experimental Data Cell map exploration and analysis Can we accurately predict protein interactions? Databases Literature Pathway Information Pathway Analysis (Cytoscape)

  43. ~280 Pathway Databases! http://pathguide.org Vuk Pavlovic

  44. Pathway Commons: A Public Library http:pathwaycommons.org Sander Lab (MSKCC) Bader Lab • Books: Pathways • Lingua Franca: BioPAX OWL • Index: cPath pathway database software • Translators: translators to BioPAX • Open access, free software • No competition: Author attribution • Aggregate ~ 20 databases in BioPAX format

  45. http://cytoscape.org Network visualization and analysis Pathway comparison Literature mining Gene Ontology analysis Active modules Complex detection Network motif search UCSD, ISB, Agilent, MSKCC, Pasteur, UCSF, Unilever, U of Toronto, U of Michigan

  46. Gene Function Prediction • Guilt-by-association principle • Biological networks are combined intelligently to optimize prediction accuracy • Algorithm is more fast and accurate than its peers Quaid Morris (CCBR) Rashad Badrawi, Ovi Comes, Sylva Donaldson, Christian Lopes, Jason Montojo, Khalid Zuberi http://www.genemania.org

  47. Canadian Bioinformatics Workshops 2009 Clinical Genomics and Biomarker Discovery Date: July 16-17, 2009, Toronto Faculty: Sohrab Shah Interpreting Gene Lists from -omics Studies Date: July 9-10, 2009, Toronto Faculty: Gary Bader, Quaid Morris & Wyeth Wasserman Informatics on High-Throughput Sequencing Data Date: July 23-24, 2009, Toronto Faculty: Michael Brudno, Asim Siddiqui & Francis Ouellette Exploratory Data Analysis and Essential Statistics using R October 2-3, 2009, Toronto Faculty: Raphael Gottardo and Boris Steipe Applications now being accepted at www.bioinformatics.ca Limited registration Registration Fee: $500

  48. PDZ Work Genentech Dev Sidhu Yingnan Zhang Heike Held Stephen Sazinsky Yan Wu University of Toronto Charlie Boone Raffi Tonikian, Xiaofeng Xin MSKCC Chris Sander Boris Reva Acknowledgements Bader Lab G2N Chris Tan David Gfeller Shirley Hui Xioajian Shao Shobhit Jain MP Anastasija Baryshnikova Iain Wallace Laetitia Morrison Ron Ammar ACM Daniele Merico Ruth Isserlin Vuk Pavlovic Oliver Stueker Cytoscape Trey Ideker (UCSD) Kei Ono, Mike Smoot, Peng Liang Wang (Ryan Kelley, Nerius Landys, Chris Workman, Mark Anderson, Nada Amin, Owen Ozier, Jonathan Wang) Lee Hood (ISB) Sarah Killcoyne, John Boyle, Ilya Shmulevich (Iliana Avila-Campillo, Rowan Christmas, Andrew Markiel, Larissa Kamenkovich, Paul Shannon) Benno Schwikowski (Pasteur) Mathieu Michaud (Melissa Cline, Tero Aittokallio) Chris Sander (MSKCC) Ethan Cerami, Ben Gross (Robert Sheridan) Annette Adler (Agilent) Allan Kuchinsky, Mike Creech (Aditya Vailaya) Bruce Conklin (UCSF) Alex Pico, Kristina Hanspers Pathway Commons Chris Sander Ethan Cerami Ben Gross Emek Demir Robert Hoffmann Igor Rodchenkov Rashad Badrawi Funding CIHR, NSERC, NIH Genome Canada Canada Foundation for Innovation/ORF http://baderlab.org

More Related