JOURNAL

Structure of Protein Interaction Networks and Their Implications on Drug Design

Vol.5(10), PLoS Computational Biology, October, 2009

Author

Takeshi Hase, Hiroshi Tanaka, Yasuhiro Suzuki, So Nakagawa, Hiroaki Kitano

Abstract

Protein-protein interaction networks (PINs) are rich sources of information that enable the network properties of biological systems to be understood. A study of the topological and statistical properties of budding yeast and human PINs revealed that they are scale-rich and configured as highly optimized tolerance (HOT) networks that are similar to the router-level topology of the Internet. This is different from claims that such networks are scale-free and configured through simple preferential-attachment processes. Further analysis revealed that there are extensive interconnections among middle-degree nodes that form the backbone of the networks. Degree distributions of essential genes, synthetic lethal genes, synthetic sick genes, and human drug-target genes indicate that there are advantageous drug targets among nodes with middle- to low-degree nodes. Such network properties provide the rationale for combinatorial drugs that target less prominent nodes to increase synergetic efficacy and create fewer side effects.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000550

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