4.7 Article

Construction and Application of a Protein Interaction Map for White Spot Syndrome Virus (WSSV)

期刊

MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
卷 13, 期 1, 页码 269-282

出版社

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/mcp.M113.029199

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资金

  1. Mahidol University, L'Oreal Thailand 'for Women in Science' fellowship
  2. National Taiwan University research grant [NTU-99R80830]
  3. National Science Council
  4. National Cheng Kung University
  5. Royal Golden Jubilee Ph.D. scholarship from the Thailand Research Fund [PHD/0231/2548]
  6. Mahidol University postdoctoral fellowship program

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White spot syndrome virus (WSSV) is currently the most serious global threat for cultured shrimp production. Although its large, double-stranded DNA genome has been completely characterized, most putative protein functions remain obscure. To provide more informative knowledge about this virus, a proteomic-scale network of WSSV-WSSV protein interactions was carried out using a comprehensive yeast two-hybrid analysis. An array of yeast transformants containing each WSSV open reading frame fused with GAL4 DNA binding domain and GAL4 activation domain was constructed yielding 187 bait and 182 prey constructs, respectively. On screening of approximate to 28,000 pairwise combinations, 710 interactions were obtained from 143 baits. An independent coimmunoprecipitation assay (co-IP) was performed to validate the selected protein interaction pairs identified from the yeast two-hybrid approach. The program Cytoscape was employed to create a WSSV protein-protein interaction (PPI) network. The topology of the WSSV PPI network was based on the Barabasi-Albert model and consisted of a scale-free network that resembled other established viral protein interaction networks. Using the RNA interference approach, knocking down either of two candidate hub proteins gave shrimp more protection against WSSV than knocking down a nonhub gene. The WSSV protein interaction map established in this study provides novel guidance for further studies on shrimp viral pathogenesis, host-viral protein interaction and potential targets for therapeutic and preventative antiviral strategies in shrimp aquaculture.

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