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Brief Communications
Nature 411, 41-42 (3 May 2001) | doi:10.1038/35075138
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- Cluster of Excellence "Multimodal Computing and Interaction"
- Saarbruecken Germany
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- University of Oxford
- Oxford United Kingdom
Lethality and centrality in protein networks
H. Jeong1, S. P. Mason2, A.-L. Barabási1 & Z. N. Oltvai2
Abstract
The most highly connected proteins in the cell are the most important for its survival.
Abstract
Proteins are traditionally identified on the basis of their individual actions as catalysts, signalling molecules, or building blocks in cells and microorganisms. But our post-genomic view is expanding the protein's role into an element in a network of protein–protein interactions as well, in which it has a contextual or cellular function within functional modules1, 2. Here we provide quantitative support for this idea by demonstrating that the phenotypic consequence of a single gene deletion in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is affected to a large extent by the topological position of its protein product in the complex hierarchical web of molecular interactions.
- Department of Physics, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA
- Department of Pathology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611, USA
Correspondence to: A.-L. Barabási1 e-mail: Email: alb@nd.edu
Correspondence to: Z. N. Oltvai2 emails: Email: alb@nd.edu and Email: zno008@nwu.edu
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