Abstract

HIV proteins target host hub proteins for transient binding interactions. The presence of viral proteins in the infected cell results in out-competition of host proteins in their interaction with hub proteins, drastically affecting cell physiology. Functional genomics and interactome datasets can be used to quantify the sequence hotspots on the HIV proteome mediating interactions with host hub proteins. In this study, we used the HIV and human interactome databases to identify HIV targeted host hub proteins and their host binding partners (H2). We developed a high throughput computational procedure utilizing motif discovery algorithms on sets of protein sequences, including sequences of HIV and H2 proteins. We identified as HIV sequence hotspots those linear motifs that are highly conserved on HIV sequences and at the same time have a statistically enriched presence on the sequences of H2 proteins. The HIV protein motifs discovered in this study are expressed by subsets of H2 host proteins potentially outcompeted by HIV proteins. A large subset of these motifs is involved in cleavage, nuclear localization, phosphorylation, and transcription factor binding events. Many such motifs are clustered on an HIV sequence in the form of hotspots. The sequential positions of these hotspots are consistent with the curated literature on phenotype altering residue mutations, as well as with existing binding site data. The hotspot map produced in this study is the first global portrayal of HIV motifs involved in altering the host protein network at highly connected hub nodes.

Highlights

  • Hub proteins in the human protein network undergo transient binding interactions with hundreds of interaction partners, as quantified in the Human Protein Reference Database (HPRD) [1]

  • To quantify the changes imposed on the host protein network by HIV, it would be important to identify the hotspots on HIV protein sequences that are used to interact with hub proteins

  • We set out to discover linear protein sequence motifs shared by HIV protein sequences and a large subset of the immediate neighbors of host hub proteins targeted by HIV

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Summary

Introduction

Hub proteins in the human protein network undergo transient binding interactions with hundreds of interaction partners, as quantified in the Human Protein Reference Database (HPRD) [1]. The HIV-1, Human Protein Interaction Database (HHPID) [8] identifies about twenty host hub proteins with at least one hundred binding partners as directly binding to one or more HIV proteins. To quantify the changes imposed on the host protein network by HIV, it would be important to identify the hotspots on HIV protein sequences that are used to interact with hub proteins. Such hot spots could represent potential antiretroviral drug targets [10,11,12]. Viral proteins can mimic native interfaces and interfere with binding events in host protein networks [14]

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