Discovery of Protein Interaction Sites

Author(s):  
Haiquan Li ◽  
Jinyan Li ◽  
Xuechun Zhao

Physical interactions between proteins are important for many cellular functions. Since protein-protein interactions are mediated via their interaction sites, identifying these interaction sites can therefore help to discover genome-scale protein interaction map, thereby leading to a better understanding of the organization of living cell. To date, the experimentally solved protein interaction sites constitute only a tiny proportion among the whole population due to the high cost and low-throughput of currently available techniques. Computational methods, including many biological data mining methods, are considered as the major approaches in discovering protein interaction sites in practical applications. This chapter reviews both traditional and recent computational methods such as protein-protein docking and motif discovery, as well as new methods on machine learning approaches, for example, interaction classification, domain-domain interactions, and binding motif pair discovery.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pan Wang ◽  
Guiyang Zhang ◽  
Zu-Guo Yu ◽  
Guohua Huang

Knowledge about protein-protein interactions is beneficial in understanding cellular mechanisms. Protein-protein interactions are usually determined according to their protein-protein interaction sites. Due to the limitations of current techniques, it is still a challenging task to detect protein-protein interaction sites. In this article, we presented a method based on deep learning and XGBoost (called DeepPPISP-XGB) for predicting protein-protein interaction sites. The deep learning model served as a feature extractor to remove redundant information from protein sequences. The Extreme Gradient Boosting algorithm was used to construct a classifier for predicting protein-protein interaction sites. The DeepPPISP-XGB achieved the following results: area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.681, a recall of 0.624, and area under the precision-recall curve of 0.339, being competitive with the state-of-the-art methods. We also validated the positive role of global features in predicting protein-protein interaction sites.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 855-882
Author(s):  
Olivia Slater ◽  
Bethany Miller ◽  
Maria Kontoyianni

Drug discovery has focused on the paradigm “one drug, one target” for a long time. However, small molecules can act at multiple macromolecular targets, which serves as the basis for drug repurposing. In an effort to expand the target space, and given advances in X-ray crystallography, protein-protein interactions have become an emerging focus area of drug discovery enterprises. Proteins interact with other biomolecules and it is this intricate network of interactions that determines the behavior of the system and its biological processes. In this review, we briefly discuss networks in disease, followed by computational methods for protein-protein complex prediction. Computational methodologies and techniques employed towards objectives such as protein-protein docking, protein-protein interactions, and interface predictions are described extensively. Docking aims at producing a complex between proteins, while interface predictions identify a subset of residues on one protein that could interact with a partner, and protein-protein interaction sites address whether two proteins interact. In addition, approaches to predict hot spots and binding sites are presented along with a representative example of our internal project on the chemokine CXC receptor 3 B-isoform and predictive modeling with IP10 and PF4.


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