Enhanced function annotations for Drosophila serine proteases: a case study for systematic annotation of multi-member gene families

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Parantu K Shah
  • Lokesh P Tripathi
  • Jensen, Lars Juhl
  • Murad Gahnim
  • Christopher Mason
  • Eileen E Furlong
  • Veronica Rodrigues
  • Kevin P White
  • Peer Bork
  • R Sowdhamini
Systematically annotating function of enzymes that belong to large protein families encoded in a single eukaryotic genome is a very challenging task. We carried out such an exercise to annotate function for serine-protease family of the trypsin fold in Drosophila melanogaster, with an emphasis on annotating serine-protease homologues (SPHs) that may have lost their catalytic function. Our approach involves data mining and data integration to provide function annotations for 190 Drosophila gene products containing serine-protease-like domains, of which 35 are SPHs. This was accomplished by analysis of structure-function relationships, gene-expression profiles, large-scale protein-protein interaction data, literature mining and bioinformatic tools. We introduce functional residue clustering (FRC), a method that performs hierarchical clustering of sequences using properties of functionally important residues and utilizes correlation co-efficient as a quantitative similarity measure to transfer in vivo substrate specificities to proteases. We show that the efficiency of transfer of substrate-specificity information using this method is generally high. FRC was also applied on Drosophila proteases to assign putative competitive inhibitor relationships (CIRs). Microarray gene-expression data were utilized to uncover a large-scale and dual involvement of proteases in development and in immune response. We found specific recruitment of SPHs and proteases with CLIP domains in immune response, suggesting evolution of a new function for SPHs. We also suggest existence of separate downstream protease cascades for immune response against bacterial/fungal infections and parasite/parasitoid infections. We verify quality of our annotations using information from RNAi screens and other evidence types. Utilization of such multi-fold approaches results in 10-fold increase of function annotation for Drosophila serine proteases and demonstrates value in increasing annotations in multiple genomes.
Original languageEnglish
JournalGene
Volume407
Issue number1-2
Pages (from-to)199-215
Number of pages17
ISSN0378-1119
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008
Externally publishedYes

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