Domain-domain interactions underlying herpesvirus-human protein-protein interaction networks

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Abstract

Protein-domains play an important role in mediating protein-protein interactions. Furthermore, the same domain-pairs mediate different interactions in different contexts and in various organisms, and therefore domain-pairs are considered as the building blocks of interactome networks. Here we extend these principles to the host-virus interface and find the domain-pairs that potentially mediate human-herpesvirus interactions. Notably, we find that the same domain-pairs used by other organisms for mediating their interactions underlie statistically significant fractions of human-virus protein inter-interaction networks. Our analysis shows that viral domains tend to interact with human domains that are hubs in the human domain-domain interaction network. This may enable the virus to easily interfere with a variety of mechanisms and processes involving various and different human proteins carrying the relevant hub domain. Comparative genomics analysis provides hints at a molecular mechanism by which the virus acquired some of its interacting domains from its human host. © 2011 Zohar Itzhaki.

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APA

Itzhaki, Z. (2011). Domain-domain interactions underlying herpesvirus-human protein-protein interaction networks. PLoS ONE, 6(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021724

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