General principles governing biomolecular interactions between species are expected to differ significantly from known principles governing the interactions within species, yet these principles remain poorly understood at the systems level. A key reason for this knowledge gap is the lack of a detailed three-dimensional (3D), atomistic view of biomolecular interaction networks between species. Recent progress in structural biology, systems biology, and computational biology has enabled accurate and large-scale construction of 3D structural models of nodes and edges for protein-protein interaction networks within and between species. The resulting within and between-species structural interaction networks have provided new biophysical, functional, and evolutionary insights into species interactions and infectious disease. Here, we review the nascent field of between-species structural systems biology, focusing on interactions between host and pathogens such as viruses. © 2012 Franzosa, Garamszegi and Xia.
CITATION STYLE
Franzosa, E. A., Garamszegi, S., & Xia, Y. (2012). Toward a three-dimensional view of protein networks between species. Frontiers in Microbiology. Frontiers Research Foundation. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2012.00428
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