Abstract

BackgroundAll molecular functions and biological processes are carried out by groups of proteins that interact with each other. Metaproteomic data continuously generates new proteins whose molecular functions and relations must be discovered. A widely accepted structure to model functional relations between proteins are protein-protein interaction networks (PPIN), and their analysis and alignment has become a key ingredient in the study and prediction of protein-protein interactions, protein function, and evolutionary conserved assembly pathways of protein complexes. Several PPIN aligners have been proposed, but attaining the right balance between network topology and biological information is one of the most difficult and key points in the design of any PPIN alignment algorithm.ResultsMotivated by the challenge of well-balanced and efficient algorithms, we have designed and implemented AligNet, a parameter-free pairwise PPIN alignment algorithm aimed at bridging the gap between topologically efficient and biologically meaningful matchings. A comparison of the results obtained with AligNet and with the best aligners shows that AligNet achieves indeed a good balance between topological and biological matching.ConclusionIn this paper we present AligNet, a new pairwise global PPIN aligner that produces biologically meaningful alignments, by achieving a good balance between structural matching and protein function conservation, and more efficient computations than state-of-the-art tools.

Highlights

  • All molecular functions and biological processes are carried out by groups of proteins that interact with each other

  • Results we report the tests performed to assess the performance of AligNet

  • Following the comparisons published in [12, 13], we decided to compare AligNet with SPINAL [7], HubAlign [8], NATALIE [18], L-GRAAL [19], and PINALOG [20] on the dataset used in [12], which consists of the protein-protein interaction networks (PPIN) of M. musculus, C. elegans, D. melanogaster, S. cerevisiae, and H. sapiens, downloaded from the IsoBase database [21]; see Table 1

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Summary

Introduction

All molecular functions and biological processes are carried out by groups of proteins that interact with each other. The alignment and analysis of proteinprotein interaction networks (PPIN) has become a key ingredient to obtain functional orthologs as well as evolutionary conserved assembly pathways of protein complexes. With this purpose, several pairwise alignment algorithms have been proposed in the last 15 years. A global alignment algorithm is aimed at finding the best overall alignment between whole PPIN [6] Several such global PPIN aligners have been proposed during the last years [4, 7,8,9,10,11]

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