Frontiers in Physiology (Sep 2010)

A membrane protein / signaling protein interaction network for Arabidopsis version AMPv2

  • Sylvie Lalonde,
  • Antoinette Sero,
  • Réjane Pratelli,
  • Guillaume Pilot,
  • Jin Chen,
  • Maria I Sardi,
  • Saman A Parsa,
  • Do-Young Kim,
  • Biswa R Acharya,
  • Erica V Stein,
  • Heng-Cheng Hu,
  • Florent Villiers,
  • Kouji Takeda,
  • Yingzhen Yang,
  • Yong S Han,
  • Rainer Schwacke,
  • William Chiang,
  • Naohiro Kato,
  • Dominique Loqué,
  • Sarah M Assmann,
  • June M Kwak,
  • Julian Schroeder,
  • Seung Y Rhee,
  • Wolf B Frommer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2010.00024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1

Abstract

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Interactions between membrane proteins and the soluble fraction are essential for signal transduction and for regulating nutrient transport. To gain insights into the membrane-based interactome, 3,852 open reading frames (ORFs) out of a target list of 8,383 representing membrane and signaling proteins from Arabidopsis thaliana were cloned into a Gateway compatible vector. The mating-based split-ubiquitin system was used to screen for potential protein-protein interactions (pPPIs) among 490 Arabidopsis ORFs. A binary robotic screen between 142 receptor-like kinases, 72 transporters, 57 soluble protein kinases and phosphatases, 40 glycosyltransferases, 95 proteins of various functions and 89 proteins with unknown function detected 387 out of 90,370 possible PPIs. A secondary screen confirmed 343 (of 387) pPPIs between 179 proteins, yielding a scale-free network (r2=0.863). Eighty of 142 transmembrane receptor-like kinases (RLK) tested positive, identifying three homomers, 63 heteromers and 80 pPPIs with other proteins. Thirty-one out of 142 RLK interactors (including RLKs) had previously been found to be phosphorylated; thus interactors may be substrates for respective RLKs. None of the pPPIs described here had been reported in the major interactome databases, including potential interactors of G protein-coupled receptors, phospholipase C, and AMT ammonium transporters. Two RLKs found as putative interactors of AMT1;1 were independently confirmed using a split luciferase assay in Arabidopsis protoplasts. These RLKs may be involved in ammonium-dependent phosphorylation of the C-terminus and regulation of ammonium uptake activity. The robotic screening method established here will enable a systematic analysis of membrane protein interactions in fungi, plants and metazoa.

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