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Protein interaction explains life's complexity

The complexity of an organism lies in the number of protein interactions in its body rather than the number of genes – and now a team of scientists have found a way to measure these all important interactions.

 

 
Microscopic mites – such as Lorryia Formosa – have fewer protein interactions than more complex organisms 
The new research, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal, shows that humans have approximately 10 times more protein interactions than the fruit fly, and 20 times as many as simple, single-cell yeast organisms.

This contradicts comparisons between the numbers of genes in different organisms, which yield surprising results - humans have approximately 24,000 genes, but fruit flies are not far behind, with approximately 14,000 genes.

Professor Michael Stumpf from Imperial College London’s Department of Life Sciences, one of the paper’s authors said: “Scientists have believed for some time that the complexity of an organism’s protein interactions determine its biological complexity, but until now it’s been impossible to put a number on the size of one organism’s interaction network compared to another, as relatively little work has been done to identify and map these interactions.”

Scientists refer to the total number of protein interactions in the body as the “human interactome”, likening it to the human genome, which is most commonly associated with giving us our human traits. The researchers devised a mathematical tool which allows them to predict the total size of an organism’s protein interaction network based on currently available, incomplete data. The researchers’ next steps will be to make much more detailed predictions based on careful comparisons between species. This will be crucial in order to understand, for example, why some fungal species yeast are important in the production of bread and beer, while other closely related species cause fungal infections with high mortality rates.

Professor Stumpf said: “Understanding the human genome definitely does not go far enough to explain what makes us different from more simple creatures. Our study indicates that protein interactions could hold one of the keys to unraveling how one organism is differentiated from another.”

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