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Dive into the research topics where Matija Dreze is active.

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Featured researches published by Matija Dreze.


Nature | 2005

Towards a proteome-scale map of the human protein-protein interaction network.

Jean François Rual; Kavitha Venkatesan; Tong Hao; Tomoko Hirozane-Kishikawa; Amélie Dricot; Ning Li; Gabriel F. Berriz; Francis D. Gibbons; Matija Dreze; Nono Ayivi-Guedehoussou; Niels Klitgord; Christophe Simon; Mike Boxem; Jennifer Rosenberg; Debra S. Goldberg; Lan V. Zhang; Sharyl L. Wong; Giovanni Franklin; Siming Li; Joanna S. Albala; Janghoo Lim; Carlene Fraughton; Estelle Llamosas; Sebiha Cevik; Camille Bex; Philippe Lamesch; Robert S. Sikorski; Jean Vandenhaute; Huda Y. Zoghbi; Alex Smolyar

Systematic mapping of protein–protein interactions, or ‘interactome’ mapping, was initiated in model organisms, starting with defined biological processes and then expanding to the scale of the proteome. Although far from complete, such maps have revealed global topological and dynamic features of interactome networks that relate to known biological properties, suggesting that a human interactome map will provide insight into development and disease mechanisms at a systems level. Here we describe an initial version of a proteome-scale map of human binary protein–protein interactions. Using a stringent, high-throughput yeast two-hybrid system, we tested pairwise interactions among the products of ∼8,100 currently available Gateway-cloned open reading frames and detected ∼2,800 interactions. This data set, called CCSB-HI1, has a verification rate of ∼78% as revealed by an independent co-affinity purification assay, and correlates significantly with other biological attributes. The CCSB-HI1 data set increases by ∼70% the set of available binary interactions within the tested space and reveals more than 300 new connections to over 100 disease-associated proteins. This work represents an important step towards a systematic and comprehensive human interactome project.


Science | 2011

Independently Evolved Virulence Effectors Converge onto Hubs in a Plant Immune System Network

M. Shahid Mukhtar; Anne-Ruxandra Carvunis; Matija Dreze; Petra Epple; Jens Steinbrenner; Jonathan D. Moore; Murat Tasan; Mary Galli; Tong Hao; Marc T. Nishimura; Samuel J. Pevzner; Susan E. Donovan; Lila Ghamsari; Balaji Santhanam; Viviana Romero; Matthew M. Poulin; Fana Gebreab; Bryan J. Gutierrez; Stanley Tam; Dario Monachello; Mike Boxem; Christopher J. Harbort; Nathan A. McDonald; Lantian Gai; Huaming Chen; Yijian He; Jean Vandenhaute; Frederick P. Roth; David E. Hill; Joseph R. Ecker

An analysis of protein-protein interactions in Arabidopsis identifies the plant interactome. Plants generate effective responses to infection by recognizing both conserved and variable pathogen-encoded molecules. Pathogens deploy virulence effector proteins into host cells, where they interact physically with host proteins to modulate defense. We generated an interaction network of plant-pathogen effectors from two pathogens spanning the eukaryote-eubacteria divergence, three classes of Arabidopsis immune system proteins, and ~8000 other Arabidopsis proteins. We noted convergence of effectors onto highly interconnected host proteins and indirect, rather than direct, connections between effectors and plant immune receptors. We demonstrated plant immune system functions for 15 of 17 tested host proteins that interact with effectors from both pathogens. Thus, pathogens from different kingdoms deploy independently evolved virulence proteins that interact with a limited set of highly connected cellular hubs to facilitate their diverse life-cycle strategies.


Nature Methods | 2009

An experimentally derived confidence score for binary protein-protein interactions

Pascal Braun; Murat Tasan; Matija Dreze; Miriam Barrios-Rodiles; Irma Lemmens; Haiyuan Yu; Julie M. Sahalie; Ryan R. Murray; Luba Roncari; Anne Sophie de Smet; Kavitha Venkatesan; Jean François Rual; Jean Vandenhaute; Michael E. Cusick; Tony Pawson; David E. Hill; Jan Tavernier; Jeffrey L. Wrana; Frederick P. Roth; Marc Vidal

Information on protein-protein interactions is of central importance for many areas of biomedical research. At present no method exists to systematically and experimentally assess the quality of individual interactions reported in interaction mapping experiments. To provide a standardized confidence-scoring method that can be applied to tens of thousands of protein interactions, we have developed an interaction tool kit consisting of four complementary, high-throughput protein interaction assays. We benchmarked these assays against positive and random reference sets consisting of well documented pairs of interacting human proteins and randomly chosen protein pairs, respectively. A logistic regression model was trained using the data from these reference sets to combine the assay outputs and calculate the probability that any newly identified interaction pair is a true biophysical interaction once it has been tested in the tool kit. This general approach will allow a systematic and empirical assignment of confidence scores to all individual protein-protein interactions in interactome networks.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Monitoring repair of UV-induced 6-4-photoproducts with a purified DDB2 protein complex

Matija Dreze; Anne S. Calkins; Judit Gálicza; Daniel J. Echelman; Mathew Schnorenberg; Gillian L. Fell; Shigenori Iwai; David E. Fisher; Dávid Szüts; J. Dirk Iglehart; Jean Bernard Lazaro

Because cells are constantly subjected to DNA damaging insults, DNA repair pathways are critical for genome integrity [1]. DNA damage recognition protein complexes (DRCs) recognize DNA damage and initiate DNA repair. The DNA-Damage Binding protein 2 (DDB2) complex is a DRC that initiates nucleotide excision repair (NER) of DNA damage caused by ultraviolet light (UV) [2]–[4]. Using a purified DDB2 DRC, we created a probe (“DDB2 proteo-probe”) that hybridizes to nuclei of cells irradiated with UV and not to cells exposed to other genotoxins. The DDB2 proteo-probe recognized UV-irradiated DNA in classical laboratory assays, including cyto- and histo-chemistry, flow cytometry, and slot-blotting. When immobilized, the proteo-probe also bound soluble UV-irradiated DNA in ELISA-like and DNA pull-down assays. In vitro, the DDB2 proteo-probe preferentially bound 6-4-photoproducts [(6-4)PPs] rather than cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs). We followed UV-damage repair by cyto-chemistry in cells fixed at different time after UV irradiation, using either the DDB2 proteo-probe or antibodies against CPDs, or (6-4)PPs. The signals obtained with the DDB2 proteo-probe and with the antibody against (6-4)PPs decreased in a nearly identical manner. Since (6-4)PPs are repaired only by nucleotide excision repair (NER), our results strongly suggest the DDB2 proteo-probe hybridizes to DNA containing (6-4)PPs and allows monitoring of their removal during NER. We discuss the general use of purified DRCs as probes, in lieu of antibodies, to recognize and monitor DNA damage and repair.


Cell | 2014

A proteome-scale map of the human interactome network

Thomas Rolland; Murat Tasan; Benoit Charloteaux; Samuel J. Pevzner; Quan Zhong; Nidhi Sahni; Song Yi; Irma Lemmens; Celia Fontanillo; Roberto Mosca; Atanas Kamburov; Susan Dina Ghiassian; Xinping Yang; Lila Ghamsari; Dawit Balcha; Bridget E. Begg; Pascal Braun; Marc Brehme; Martin P. Broly; Anne-Ruxandra Carvunis; Dan Convery-Zupan; Roser Corominas; Jasmin Coulombe-Huntington; Elizabeth Dann; Matija Dreze; Amélie Dricot; Changyu Fan; Eric A. Franzosa; Fana Gebreab; Bryan J. Gutierrez


Nature Methods | 2009

Literature-curated protein interaction datasets

Michael E. Cusick; Haiyuan Yu; Alex Smolyar; Kavitha Venkatesan; Anne-Ruxandra Carvunis; Nicolas Simonis; Jean François Rual; Heather Borick; Pascal Braun; Matija Dreze; Jean Vandenhaute; Mary Galli; Junshi Yazaki; David E. Hill; Joseph R. Ecker; Frederick P. Roth; Marc Vidal


Nature Methods | 2009

Empirically controlled mapping of the Caenorhabditis elegans protein-protein interactome network.

Nicolas Simonis; Jean François Rual; Anne-Ruxandra Carvunis; Murat Tasan; Irma Lemmens; Tomoko Hirozane-Kishikawa; Tong Hao; Julie M. Sahalie; Kavitha Venkatesan; Fana Gebreab; Sebiha Cevik; Niels Klitgord; Changyu Fan; Pascal Braun; Ning Li; Nono Ayivi-Guedehoussou; Elizabeth Dann; Nicolas Bertin; David Szeto; Amélie Dricot; Muhammed A. Yildirim; Chenwei Lin; Anne Sophie de Smet; Huey Ling Kao; Christophe Simon; Alex Smolyar; Jin Sook Ahn; Muneesh Tewari; Mike Boxem; Haiyuan Yu


Methods in Enzymology | 2010

HIGH-QUALITY BINARY INTERACTOME MAPPING

Matija Dreze; Dario Monachello; Claire Lurin; Michael E. Cusick; David E. Hill; Marc Vidal; Pascal Braun


Nature Methods | 2009

'Edgetic' perturbation of a C. elegans BCL2 ortholog

Matija Dreze; Benoit Charloteaux; Pierre Olivier Vidalain; Muhammed A. Yildirim; Quan Zhong; Nenad Svrzikapa; Viviana Romero; Géraldine Laloux; Robert Brasseur; Jean Vandenhaute; Mike Boxem; Michael E. Cusick; David E. Hill; Marc Vidal


Archive | 2009

Literature-curated protein interaction

Haiyuan Yu; Alex Smolyar; Kavitha Venkatesan; Anne-Ruxandra Carvunis; Nicolas Simonis; Jean François Rual; Heather Borick; Pascal Braun; Matija Dreze; Jean Vandenhaute; Mary Galli; Junshi Yazaki; David E. Hill; Joseph R. Ecker; Frederick P. Roth; Marc Vidal

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