Proteome-wide protein interaction measurements of bacterial proteins of unknown function

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Abstract

Despite the enormous proliferation of bacterial genome data, surprisingly persistent collections of bacterial proteins have resisted functional annotation. In a typical genome, roughly 30% of genes have no assigned function. Many of these proteins are conserved across a large number of bacterial genomes. To assign a putative function to these conserved proteins of unknown function, we created a physical interaction map by measuring biophysical interaction of these proteins. Binary protein - protein interactions in the model organism Streptococcus pneumoniae (TIGR4) are measured with a microfluidic high-throughput assay technology. In some cases, informatic analysis was used to restrict the space of potential binding partners. In other cases, we performed in vitro proteome-wide interaction screens. We were able to assign putative functions to 50 conserved proteins of unknown function that we studied with this approach.

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Meier, M., Sit, R. V., & Quake, S. R. (2013). Proteome-wide protein interaction measurements of bacterial proteins of unknown function. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(2), 477–482. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1210634110

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