The origins of the evolutionary signal used to predict protein-protein interactions

Lakshmipuram S. Swapna, Narayanaswamy Srinivasan, David L. Robertson, Simon C. Lovell

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background: The correlation of genetic distances between pairs of protein sequence alignments has been used to infer protein-protein interactions. It has been suggested that these correlations are based on the signal of co-evolution between interacting proteins. However, although mutations in different proteins associated with maintaining an interaction clearly occur (particularly in binding interfaces and neighbourhoods), many other factors contribute to correlated rates of sequence evolution. Proteins in the same genome are usually linked by shared evolutionary history and so it would be expected that there would be topological similarities in their phylogenetic trees, whether they are interacting or not. For this reason the underlying species tree is often corrected for. Moreover processes such as expression level, are known to effect evolutionary rates. However, it has been argued that the correlated rates of evolution used to predict protein interaction explicitly includes shared evolutionary history; here we test this hypothesis. Results: In order to identify the evolutionary mechanisms giving rise to the correlations between interaction proteins, we use phylogenetic methods to distinguish similarities in tree topologies from similarities in genetic distances. We use a range of datasets of interacting and non-interacting proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We find that the signal of correlated evolution between interacting proteins is predominantly a result of shared evolutionary rates, rather than similarities in tree topology, independent of evolutionary divergence. Conclusions: Since interacting proteins do not have tree topologies that are more similar than the control group of non-interacting proteins, it is likely that coevolution does not contribute much to, if any, of the observed correlations. © 2012 Swapna et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number238
    JournalBMC Evolutionary Biology
    Volume12
    Issue number1
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

    Keywords

    • Co-evolution
    • Correlated evolution
    • Phylogenetic
    • Protein evolution
    • Protein-protein complexes
    • Protein-protein interactions

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