Authors
Gareth Butland, José Manuel Peregrín-Alvarez, Joyce Li, Wehong Yang, Xiaochun Yang, Veronica Canadien, Andrei Starostine, Dawn Richards, Bryan Beattie, Nevan Krogan, Michael Davey, John Parkinson, Jack Greenblatt, Andrew Emili
Publication date
2005/2/3
Journal
Nature
Volume
433
Issue
7025
Pages
531-537
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Proteins often function as components of multi-subunit complexes. Despite its long history as a model organism, no large-scale analysis of protein complexes in Escherichia coli has yet been reported. To this end, we have targeted DNA cassettes into the E. coli chromosome to create carboxy-terminal, affinity-tagged alleles of 1,000 open reading frames (∼ 23% of the genome). A total of 857 proteins, including 198 of the most highly conserved, soluble non-ribosomal proteins essential in at least one bacterial species, were tagged successfully, whereas 648 could be purified to homogeneity and their interacting protein partners identified by mass spectrometry. An interaction network of protein complexes involved in diverse biological processes was uncovered and validated by sequential rounds of tagging and purification. This network includes many new interactions as well as interactions predicted based solely on …
Total citations
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