DocumentCode :
3306821
Title :
Novel hub protein classification and interaction rules in protein-protein interaction network in Saccharomyces cerevisia
Author :
Lu Cai ; Shen Qin ; Zhiyong Pei
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Math., Phys. & Biol. Eng., Inner Mongolia Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Baotou, China
Volume :
2
fYear :
2011
fDate :
26-28 July 2011
Firstpage :
1157
Lastpage :
1161
Abstract :
The majority of cellular functions can rarely be attributed to a single protein, gene or enzyme. Protein-protein interactions are fundamental to most of cellular processes or functions. Hubs, proteins with high connectivity, mediate the organization and function of cellular protein interaction networks (PINs). As a first step, research on hub proteins starts with classification. Although there are a few methods to classify hubs, the connection between classification methods and property of protein-protein interaction is unclear. In this work, hub proteins in S. cerevisiae were classified into three categories: systemic hubs, component hubs and process hubs based on biological annotation information in Gene Ontology (GO) using X-means clustering. The sub-network graphs of hubs and non-hubs were constructed. The hub proteins in different categories in the PIN graphs distribute differently. The distributions of sub-networks of systemic hub and non-hub proteins are uniform, while those of process hub and component hub proteins are modular. A parameter as an indication of protein class interaction bias (PCIB) was introduced and calculated to describe the tendency of a protein to interact with other proteins. It was shown that interaction bias among hub proteins, and from nonhub proteins to hub proteins are strong, while interaction bias among non-hub proteins or from hub to non-hub proteins is weak. Our theoretical result is consistent with experimental findings that different groups of hubs function at specific times or in characteristic space in cellular system. For the first time, we show the interactions among different hub classes are biased, and the interaction between hubs is directional. Our result also suggests possible connection between hub classification and protein interaction bias.
Keywords :
biochemistry; cellular biophysics; enzymes; genetics; molecular biophysics; Saccharomyces cerevisia; X-means clustering; biological annotation information; cellular functions; cellular protein interaction networks; cellular system; component hub proteins; enzyme; gene ontology; hub protein classification; process hubs; protein class interaction bias; protein-protein interaction network; subnetwork graphs; systemic hubs; Bioinformatics; Biomembranes; Humans; Ontologies; Pins; Proteins; Go annotation; Hub protein; Protein-protein interaction network; classification;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Fuzzy Systems and Knowledge Discovery (FSKD), 2011 Eighth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Shanghai
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-180-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FSKD.2011.6019657
Filename :
6019657
Link To Document :
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