Abstract
An important goal of systems biology is the identification and investigation of known and predicted protein-protein interactions to obtain more information about new cellular pathways and processes. Proteins interact via domains, thus it is important to know which domains a protein contains and which domains interact with each other. Here we present the Java^TM^ program ProDGe (Protein Domain Gene), which visualizes existing and suggests novel domain-domain interactions and protein-protein interactions at the domain level. The comprehensive dataset behind ProDGe consists of protein, domain and interaction information for both layers, collected and combined appropriately from UniProt, Pfam, DOMINE and IntAct. Based on known domain interactions, ProDGe suggests novel protein interactions and assigns them to four confidence classes, depending on the reliability of the underlying domain interaction. Furthermore, ProDGe is able to identify potential homologous interaction partners in other species, which is particularly helpful when investigating poorly annotated species. We further evaluated and compared experimentally identified protein interactions from IntAct with domain interactions from DOMINE for six species and noticed that 31.13% of all IntAct protein interactions in all six species can be mapped to the actual interacting domains. ProDGe and a comprehensive documentation are freely available at http://www.cogsys.cs.uni-tuebingen.de/software/ProDGe.
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Büchel, F., Wrzodek, C., Mittag, F. et al. ProDGe: investigating protein-protein interactions at the domain level. Nat Prec (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2011.6188.1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/npre.2011.6188.1