Simultaneously measuring multiple protein interactions and their correlations in a cell by Protein-interactome Footprinting

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Abstract

Quantitatively detecting correlations of multiple protein-protein interactions (PPIs) in vivo is a big challenge. Here we introduce a novel method, termed Protein-interactome Footprinting (PiF), to simultaneously measure multiple PPIs in one cell. The principle of PiF is that each target physical PPI in the interactome is simultaneously transcoded into a specific DNA sequence based on dimerization of the target proteins fused with DNA-binding domains. The interaction intensity of each target protein is quantified as the copy number of the specific DNA sequences bound by each fusion protein dimers. Using PiF, we quantitatively reveal dynamic patterns of PPIs and their correlation network in E. coli two-component systems.

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Luo, S. W., Liang, Z., & Wu, J. R. (2017). Simultaneously measuring multiple protein interactions and their correlations in a cell by Protein-interactome Footprinting. Scientific Reports, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep45169

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