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Transient Protein-Protein Interactions (TPPI) Presented By: Muhammad Shoaib Amjad 11 arid 3758 PhD Botany 1st Semester Contents  Protein-protein interactions  Transient protein interaction  Transient protein and drug interaction  Experimental techniques used for detecting TPPIs  List of databases  Summary  References 2 Protein-Protein Interaction (PPI)  Interaction of two proteins  Play an essential role in the proper functioning of living cells  The forces responsible for these interactions include  Electrostatic forces  Hydrogen bonds  Van der waals forces  Hydrophobic effects 3 Types of Potien-Protien interactions PPIs can be classified on the bases of Composition  Homo and hetero-oligomeric complexes Affinity  Non-obligate and obligate complexes Stability/Life time  Transient and permanent 4 5 Transient and Permanent  Permanent  Stable  Irreversible  Strong  Long life  Electrostatic force  Example: α/β tubulin dimer and many enzymeinhibitor complexes 6 Transiet protein-protein interactions (TPPI) TPPIs are involved in many biological processes:  Signal transduction  Protein complexes or molecular machinery  Protein carrier  Protein modifications (phosphorylation)  Hormone receptor binding  Allostery of enzymes  Inhibition of proteases  Correction of misfold protein by chaperones 7 Transient protein and drug interaction  Transient interactions might be important in  drug mechanisms in two ways: the drugs that 1. act on TPPIs 2. act transiently on their multiple targets  A cancer-related example for the former type of drugs is nutlins 8 Transient protein and drug interaction Nutlins MDM2 MDM2 p53 p53 Tumor suppressed 9 Experimental Techniques  Yeast two-hybrid screens  Mass spectrometry  Intracellular localization of proteins with fluorescence markers 10 11 Yeast Two-hybrid  Researchers insert a gene in yeast for a "bait" protein alongside DNA for half of an "activator" protein.  The other half of the activator DNA is then inserted alongside DNA for random "prey" proteins.  The yeast cells are then grown up and the proteins are allowed to interact.  If bait and prey proteins bind, the two halves of the activator protein be close enough to work together to turn on another yeast gene that turns the cell blue, signaling a match. 12 How does it work?  Uses yeast as a model for eukaryotic protein interactions  A library is screened or a protein is characterized using a bait construct  Interactions are identified by the transcription of reporter genes  Positives are selected using differential media 13 Transcriptio n Activating Region Bait Protein Prey Protein Reporter Gene DNA-Binding Domain DNA-Binding Site 14 15 What is the yeast two-hybrid system used for?  Identifies novel protein-protein interactions  Can identify protein cascades  Identifies mutations that affect protein-protein binding  Can identify interfering proteins in known interactions 16 Steps to Screen a Library  Create the Bait Plasmid Construct from the gene of interest and the DNA binding domain of Gal4 or LexA or other suitable domain  Transform with the bait construct a yeast strain lacking the promoter for the reporter genes and select for transformed yeast  Transform the yeast again with the library plasmids  Select for interaction 17 Sequence analysis  Isolate plasmid from yeast and transform E. coli  Purify plasmid from E. coli and sequence  Blast sequence against database for known proteins or construct a possible protein sequence from the DNA sequence and compare to other proteins 18 Sample Plasmid From Golemis Lab Homepage 19 Reporter Genes  LacZ reporter - Blue/White Screening  HIS3 reporter - Screen on His+ media  LEU2 reporter - Screen on Leu+ media  ADE2 reporter - Screen on Ade+ media  URA3 reporter - Screen on Ura+ media 20 False Positives  False positives are the largest problem with the yeast two-hybrid system  Can be caused by:  Non-specific binding of the prey  Ability to induce transcription without interaction with the bait (Majority of false positives) 21 Elimination of False Positives  Sequence Analysis  Plasmid Loss Assays  Retransformation of both strain with bait plasmid and strain without bait plasmid  Test for interaction with an unrelated protein as bait  Two (or more) step selections 22 Advantages  Immediate availability of the cloned gene of the     interacting protein Only a single plasmid construction is required Interactions are detected in vivo Weak, transient interactions can be detected Can accumulate a weak signal over time 23 Examples of Uses of the Yeast Two-Hybrid System  Identification of caspase substrates  Interaction of Calmodulin and L-Isoaspartyl Methyltransferase  Genetic characterization of mutations in E2F1  Peptide hormone-receptor interactions  Pha-4 interactions in C. elegans 24 The Study of Protein-protein Interaction by Mass Spectrometry 25 26 27 28 29 30 Summary  The components of transient complexes associate and dissociate rapidly while transiently interacting with each other to function dynamically in crucial regulatory and signaling pathways.  The identification and analysis of these complexes have become more manageable with the emerging sensitive and high-resolution experimental techniques accompanied by the high-throughput computational methods. 31 32  As the coverage of these techniques increase, they can provide a good template to understand and design new transient complexes.  An example for such advanced techniques is, PRISM, which uses available transient interactions as a template set and searches structural and evolutionary similarities between the template set and the target proteins to be predicted. References  James R. Perkins, I. Diboun, B.H. Dessailly, J. G. Lees and C. Orengo. 2010. Transient Protein- Protein Interactions: Structural Functional And Network Properties. Cell:1233-1244.  Saliha E. A. O., H. B. Engin, A. Gursoy and O. Keskin. 2011. Transient Protein- Protein Interactions. Protein Interaction Designed And selection: 1-14  Costel C. D., K. Deinhardt, G. Zhang, H. S. Cardasis and M. V. C.A. Neubert. 2011. Identifying transient protein–protein interactions in EphB2 signaling by blue native PAGE and mass spectrometry Proteomics J:11, 4514–4528  Lakshmipuram S. S., R. M. Bhaskara, J. Sharma and N. Srinivasan. 2012. Roles of residues in the interface of transient protein-protein complexes before complexation. Scientific reports: 334. 33 34