Biological interacting units identified in human protein networks reveal tissue-functional diversification and its impact on disease

Comput Struct Biotechnol J. 2022 Jul 15:20:3764-3778. doi: 10.1016/j.csbj.2022.07.006. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Protein-protein interactions (PPI) play an essential role in the biological processes that occur in the cell. Therefore, the dissection of PPI networks becomes decisive to model functional coordination and predict pathological de-regulation. Cellular networks are dynamic and proteins display varying roles depending on the tissue-interactomic context. Thus, the use of centrality measures in individual proteins fall short to dissect the functional properties of the cell. For this reason, there is a need for more comprehensive, relational, and context-specific ways to analyze the multiple actions of proteins in different cells and identify specific functional assemblies within global biomolecular networks. Under this framework, we define Biological Interacting units (BioInt-U) as groups of proteins that interact physically and are enriched in a common Gene Ontology. A search strategy was applied on 33 tissue-specific (TS) PPI networks to generate BioInt libraries associated with each particular human tissue. The cross-tissue comparison showed that housekeeping assemblies incorporate different proteins and exhibit distinct network properties depending on the tissue. Furthermore, disease genes (DGs) of tissue-associated pathologies preferentially accumulate in units in the expected tissues, which in turn were more central in the TS networks. Overall, the study reveals a tissue-specific functional diversification based on the identification of specific protein units and suggests vulnerabilities specific of each tissue network, which can be applied to refine protein-disease association methods.

Keywords: BiU, BioInt unit; Biological function; CO, CORUM complex; DEg, Differentially expressed gene; DG, Disease gene; Disease gene; GO-BP, Gene Ontology biological process; HK, Housekeeping; Housekeeping gene; PPI network; PPI, Protein-protein interaction; Protein module; SS, Simpson's similarity; TE, Tissue enriched; TS, Tissue-specific; Tissue-specific gene; UB, Ubiquitous.