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Genome-wide Functional Linkage Maps Methods for inferring functional linkages: Complexes, Pathways The Genome-wide functional linkage Map in M. tb Assessing accuracy of functional linkages Functional linkages in structural genomics Analyzing parallel pathways The DIP and ProLinks databases 4000 3000 TB Gene A Rosetta stone Phylogenetic profiles Gene neighbors Operon method (Microarray method) 2000 1000 0 0 1000 2000 TB Gene B 3000 4000 Diphtheria Toxin Dimer vs. Monomer Bennett et al., PNAS, Vol. 91, 3127-3131 (1994) Rosetta Stone Assumption: Fusion of functionally-linked domains In organism 1: A B A In organism 2: A' B' Implies proteins A and B may be functionally linked Marcotte et al. (1999) Science, 285, 751 PHYLOGENETIC PROFILE METHOD Pellegrini et al (1999) PNAS 96, 4285 The Gene Neighbor Method for Inferring Functional Linkages A B A A B genome 1 C genome 2 B genome 3 C A C B C genome 4 . . . A statistically significant correlation is observed between the positions of proteins A and B across multiple genomes. A functional relationship is inferred between proteins A and B, but not between the other pairs of proteins: A C B OPERON or GENE CLUSTER method of inferring functional linkages in the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis gene A bbbb gene B gene C Number of predicted Distance threshold operon groups # of genes with links # of functional linkages 0 bp 542 1279 2034 25 bp 792 2071 4442 50 bp 879 2420 5890 75 bp 919 2665 7026 100 bp 933 2870 8468 The 100 bp threshold is chosen because it gives the broadest coverage consistent with high accuracy Research of Michael Strong Network Interaction Map vs. Genome-Wide Functional Linkage Map Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map (RS, PP, GN, OP overlap) 4000 TB Gene A 3000 2000 1000 vs 0 0 1000 2000 TB Gene B 3000 4000 Functional linkage between Gene A and Gene B Strong, Graeber et al. (2003) Nucleic Acid Research, 31, 7099 Operon Method Rosetta Stone Method 4000 4000 TB Gene A 3000 TB Gene A 2000 3000 1000 2000 1000 TB Gene B 0 0 1000 2000 0 3000 4000 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 TB Gene B Conserved Gene Neighbor Method Phylogenetic Profiles Method 4000 4000 3000 TB Gene A TB gene A 3000 2000 2000 1000 1000 0 0 0 1000 2000 TB gene B 3000 4000 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 TB Gene B Figure 7. M. Strong, T. Graeber et al. Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map (RS, PP, GN, OP methods for TB) 4000 TB Gene A 3000 2000 1000 0 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 TB Gene B Requiring 2 or more functional linkages: 1,865 genes make 9,766 linkages Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Zoom (Genes Rv0001-Rv0051) 50 D E TB Gene A 40 C 30 B 20 F 10 A 0 0 10 20 30 TB Gene B 40 50 Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Zoom (Genes Rv0001-Rv0051) 50 D E TB Gene A 40 Cluster A: 6 genes; 5 annotated 4 linkages 5 genes coding for DNA replication or repair The 6th gene inferred to B be involved in DNA binding, and in fact encodes a Zn-ribbon 30 20 10 C F A 0 0 10 20 30 TB Gene B 40 50 Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Zoom (Genes Rv0001-Rv0051) 50 D E TB Gene A 40 Cluster A: 6 genes; 5 annotated 5 linkages 5 genes coding for DNA replication or repair The 6th gene inferred to B be involved in DNA binding, and in fact encodes a Zn-ribbon 30 20 10 C F None of the genes is a homolog A 0 0 10 20 30 TB Gene B 40 50 Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Zoom (Genes Rv0001-Rv0051) 50 D E Cluster B: 6 genes; 7 linkages 3 genes: Ser/Thr kinase C or phophatase activities 2 genes: cell wall biosynth. 1 gene: unannotated TB Gene A 40 30 B 20 F 10 Gene 14, pknB (a Ser/Thr kinase) contains PASTA domains (penicillin-binding serine/threonine kinase associated) A 0 0 10 20 30 TB Gene B 40 50 Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Zoom (Genes Rv0001-Rv0051) 50 D E Cluster B: 6 genes; 7 linkages 3 genes: Ser/Thr kinase C or phophotase activities 2 genes: cell wall biosynth. 1 gene: unannotated TB Gene A 40 30 B 20 F 10 Gene 19 is unannotated. It contains A FHA (Forkhead associated) domain, which binds phosphothreonine containing proteins. A 0 0 10 20 30 TB Gene B 40 50 Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Zoom (Genes Rv0001-Rv0051) 50 D E TB Gene A 40 C Cluster D: Links gene 50 (a penicillin binding protein involved in cell wall synthesis) to gene 51 (an integral membrane protein). 30 B 20 F 10 A 0 0 10 20 30 TB Gene B 40 50 Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Zoom (Genes Rv0001-Rv0051) 50 E is a functional link between D gene 16 (pbkA in cell wall biosynthesis) and gene 50 (the penicillin binding protein involved in cell wall biosynthesis) E TB Gene A 40 30 C 20 A 10 F B 0 0 10 20 30 TB Gene B 40 50 Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map (RS, PP, GN, OP methods for TB) 4000 TB Gene A 3000 2000 1000 0 0 1000 2000 TB Gene B 3000 4000 Some columns show similar linkages, so cluster like columns, using Eisen et al.(1998) procedure, CLUSTER Hierarchical clustering of the TB Whole Genome Functional Linkage Map Functional modules range in size From 2 to > 100 linkages Dozens of off diagonal functional linkages Research of Michael Strong and Tom Graeber Degradation of Fatty acids Polyketide and nonribosomal,Degradation of Fatty acids, and Energy Metabolism Energy Metabolism, oxidoreductases Polyketide and non-ribosomal Peptide synthesis Detoxification Research of Michael Strong and Tom Graeber Cell Envelope, Cell Division Energy Metabolism TCA Broad Regulatory, Serine Threonine Protein Kinase Cell Envelope, Murein Sacculus and Peptidoglycan Transport/Binding Proteins Transport/Binding Proteins Cations Chaperones Cell Envelope Energy Metabolism, ATP Proton Motive force Biosynthesis of cofactors Cytochrome P450 Two component systems Energy Metabolism, Anaerobic Respiration Sugar Metabolism Purine, Pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis Aromatic Amino Acid Biosynthesis Novel Group Biosynthesis of Cofactors, Prosthetic groups Synthesis and Modif. Of Macromolecules, rpl,rpm, rps Amino Acid Biosynthesis (Branched) Degradation of Fatty Acids Emergy Metab. Respiration Aerobic Energy Metabolism, oxidoreductase Fig 4. M. Strong, T. Graeber et al. Energy Metabolism, oxidoreductase Polyketide and non-ribosomal peptide synthesis Lipid Biosynthesis Amino acid Biosynthesis Virulence Deg. of Fatty Acids Detoxification Cell Envelope, Cell Division Energy Metabolism TCA Broad Regulatory, Serine Threonine Protein Kinase Cell Envelope, Murein Sacculus and Peptidoglycan Transport/Binding Proteins Transport/Binding Proteins Cations Chaperones Cell Envelope Energy Metabolism, ATP Proton Motive force Biosynthesis of cofactors Cytochrome P450 Two component systems Aromatic Amino Acid Biosynthesis Novel Group Energy Metabolism, Anaerobic Respiration Sugar Metabolism Purine, Pyrimidine nucleotide biosynthesis One of 7 modules of unannotated linkages, perhaps undiscovered pathways or complexes Biosynthesis of Cofactors, Prosthetic groups Amino Acid Biosynthesis (Branched) Degradation of Fatty Acids Emergy Metab. Respiration Aerobic Energy Metabolism, oxidoreductase Energy Metabolism, oxidoreductase Polyketide and non-ribosomal peptide synthesis Lipid Biosynthesis Amino acid Biosynthesis Virulence Deg. of Fatty Acids Detoxification Pathway Reconstruction from Functional Linkages All 9 enzymes of the histidine biosynthesis pathway are linked, and are clustered separately from other amino acid synthetic pathways HisG HisF HisI / HisI2 HisA HisH HisB HisC / HisC2 HisB HisD Functional Linkages Among Cytochrome Oxidase Genes CtaD CtaE Functional linkages relate all 3 components of cytochrome oxidase complex and also CtaB, the cytochrome oxidase assembly factor These genes are at four different chromosomal locations Membrane proteins linked to soluble proteins CtaC CtaB Quantitative Assessment of Inferred Protein Complexes Research of Edward Marcotte, Matteo Pellegrini, Michael Thompson and Todd Yeates Calculating Probabilities of Coevolution n N n k mk Phylogenetic Profile P(k | n, m, N ) N Rosetta Stone N= number of fully sequenced genomes m n= number of homologs of protein A m = number of homologs of protein B k = number of genomes shared in common Gene Neighbor n = intergenic separation ln X k k 0 k! Pm ( X ) 1 Pm ( X ) X X= fractional separation of genes Operon m 1 P(n) 1 e n Combining Inferences of CoEvolution from 4 Methods We use a Bayesian approach to combine the probabilities from the four methods to arrive at a single probability that two proteins co-evolve: 4 P( f i | pos) P( pos) Opost i 1 P( f i | neg ) P(neg ) where positive pairs are proteins with common pathway annotation and negative pairs are proteins with different annotation ProLinks Database www.dip.doembi.ucla.edu/pronav ~ 10,000,000 Functional Linkages inferred from 83 fully sequenced genomes Benchmarking this Approach Against Known Complexes Ecocyc: Karp et al. NAR, 30, 56 (2002) ROC plot 0.4 Research of Matteo Pellegrini Fraction of True Positives 0.35 For high confidence links, we find 1/3 of true interactions with only one 1/1000 of the false positive ones 0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 Random 0.05 0 0 0.001 0.002 0.003 0.004 0.005 0.006 0.007 0.008 0.009 Fraction of False Positives True positive interactions are between subunits of known complexes and false positive ones are between subunits of different complexes. Example Complex: NADH Dehydrogenase I 11 of 13 subunits detected Example Complex: NADH Dehydrogenase I 11 of 13 subunits detected 3 false positives From Inferred Protein Linkages to Structures of Complexes Research of Michael Strong, Shuishu Wang, Markus Kauffman The Problem of PE and PPE Proteins in M. tb PE, PE-PGRS, and PPE Proteins in M. tuberculosis 38 PE proteins; 61 PE-PGRS proteins; 68 PPE proteins Together compromise about 5 % of the genome No function is known, but some appear to be membrane bound No structure is known: always insoluble when expressed Goal: use functional linkages to predict a complex between a PE and a PPE protein: express complex, and determine its structure Research of Shuishu Wang and Michael Strong Construction of a co-expression vector to test for protein-protein interactions (Mike Strong) T7 promoter lac oper. RBS gene A Nde1 RBS Kpn1 gene B Thrombin site NcoI His tag HindIII pET 29b(+) transcription polycistronic mRNA translation protein A If proteins do not interact protein A protein B (with His tag) protein B (with His tag) If proteins interact (protein-protein interaction) protein A protein B (with His tag) When co-expressed, the PE and PPE proteins, inferred to interact, do form a soluble complex, Mr = 35,200 Sedimentation equilibrium experiments: Rv2430c + Rv2431c fraction 49, in 20mM HEPES, 150mM NaCl, pH 7.8 Concentration OD280 0.7, 0.45, 0.15 Expected Mr: Rv 2431c (PE) 10,687 (10563.12 from Mass Spec) Rv2430c+His tag (PPE) 24,072 (23895.00 from Mass Spec) Possibly suggests a 1:1 complex between these two proteins Crystallization trials of the Complex Between PE Protein Rv2430c and PPE Protein Rv2431c Database of Interacting Proteins www.dip.doe-mbi.ucla.edu Experimentally detected interactions from the scientific literature Currently ~ 44,000 interactions The DIP Database DOE-MBI LSBMM, UCLA Live DIP Gives the States of Proteins Transitions Documented * * * ProLinks Database and the Protein Navigator • Contains some 10,000,000 inferred functional linkages from 83 genomes • Available at www.doe-mbi.ucla.edu • Soon to be expanded to 250 fully sequenced genomes • Eventually to be reconciled with DIP Summary Many functional linkages are revealed from genomic and microarray data (high coverage) Validity of functional linkages can be assessed by comparison to known complexes, and to expression data, and by keyword recovery Clustered genome-wide functional maps can reveal and organize information on complexes and pathways Functional linkages can reveal protein complexes suitable for structural studies B C A protein’s function is defined by Y A X the cellular context of its linkages V Z Protein Interactions Analysis of M.tb. Genome Michael Strong Whole Genome Interaction Maps Michael Strong & Tom Graeber Methods of Inferring Interactions Edward Marcotte, Matteo Pellegrini, Todd Yeates Michael Thompson, Richard Llwellyn Database of Interacting Proteins Lukasz Salwinski, Joyce Duan, Ioannis Xenarios, Robert Riley, Christopher Miller Parallel pathways Huiying Li