Inter-protein sequence co-evolution predicts known physical interactions in bacterial ribosomes and the trp operon
Christoph Feinauer, Hendrik Szurmant, Martin Weigt, Andrea Pagnani

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method based on direct-coupling analysis to predict protein-protein interactions from sequence data, successfully identifying known interactions in bacterial ribosomes and the trp operon with high accuracy.
Contribution
It presents a new approach leveraging co-evolution signals to infer protein interactions, demonstrating high predictive performance on biological systems.
Findings
Predicts protein interactions with 70-90% true positive rate.
Accurately identifies interacting residues with 60-85% true positive rate.
Performance depends on the size of sequence alignments.
Abstract
Interaction between proteins is a fundamental mechanism that underlies virtually all biological processes. Many important interactions are conserved across a large variety of species. The need to maintain interaction leads to a high degree of co-evolution between residues in the interface between partner proteins. The inference of protein-protein interaction networks from the rapidly growing sequence databases is one of the most formidable tasks in systems biology today. We propose here a novel approach based on the Direct-Coupling Analysis of the co-evolution between inter-protein residue pairs. We use ribosomal and trp operon proteins as test cases: For the small resp. large ribosomal subunit our approach predicts protein-interaction partners at a true-positive rate of 70% resp. 90% within the first 10 predictions, with areas of 0.69 resp. 0.81 under the ROC curves for all…
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