Pathogen-host protein-protein interaction systems examine the interactions between the protein repertoires of 2 distinct organisms. Some of these pathogen proteins interact with the host protein system and may manipulate it for their own advantages. In this work, we designed an R script by concatenating 2 functions called rowDM and rowCVmed to infer pathogen-host interaction using previously reported microarray data, including host gene enrichment analysis and the crossing of interspecific domain-domain interactions. We applied this script to the -host system to describe pathogen survival mechanisms from human, mouse, and Gene Expression Omnibus series. Our outcomes exhibited similar results with previously reported microarray analyses, but we found other important proteins that could contribute to toxoplasma pathogenesis. We observed that ROP38 is the most differentially expressed protein among toxoplasma strains. Enrichment analysis and KEGG mapping indicated that the human retinal genes most affected by infections are those related to antiapoptotic mechanisms. We suggest that proteins PIK3R1, PRKCA, PRKCG, PRKCB, HRAS, and c-JUN could be the possible substrates for differentially expressed kinase ROP38. Likewise, we propose that causes overexpression of apoptotic suppression human genes.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5753922 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1177932217747256 | DOI Listing |
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