PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Predicting protein-protein interaction by the mirrortree method: possibilities and limitations.

  • Hua Zhou,
  • Eric Jakobsson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081100
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. e81100

Abstract

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Molecular co-evolution analysis as a sequence-only based method has been used to predict protein-protein interactions. In co-evolution analysis, Pearson's correlation within the mirrortree method is a well-known way of quantifying the correlation between protein pairs. Here we studied the mirrortree method on both known interacting protein pairs and sets of presumed non-interacting protein pairs, to evaluate the utility of this correlation analysis method for predicting protein-protein interactions within eukaryotes. We varied metrics for computing evolutionary distance and evolutionary span of the species analyzed. We found the differences between co-evolutionary correlation scores of the interacting and non-interacting proteins, normalized for evolutionary span, to be significantly predictive for proteins conserved over a wide range of eukaryotic clades (from mammals to fungi). On the other hand, for narrower ranges of evolutionary span, the predictive power was much weaker.