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Featured researches published by Philippe Lamesch.


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.


Nature Genetics | 2001

Open-reading-frame sequence tags (OSTs) support the existence of at least 17,300 genes in C. elegans

Jérôme Reboul; Philippe Vaglio; Nia Tzellas; Nicolas Thierry-Mieg; Troy Moore; Cindy Jackson; Tadasu Shin-I; Yuji Kohara; Danielle Thierry-Mieg; Jean Thierry-Mieg; Hongmei Lee; Joseph Hitti; Lynn Doucette-Stamm; James L. Hartley; Gary F. Temple; Michael A. Brasch; Jean Vandenhaute; Philippe Lamesch; David E. Hill; Marc Vidal

The genome sequences of Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster and Arabidopsis thaliana have been predicted to contain 19,000, 13,600 and 25,500 genes, respectively. Before this information can be fully used for evolutionary and functional studies, several issues need to be addressed. First, the gene number estimates obtained in silico and not yet supported by any experimental data need to be verified. For example, it seems biologically paradoxical that C. elegans would have 50% more genes than Drosophilia. Second, intron/exon predictions need to be tested experimentally. Third, complete sets of open reading frames (ORFs), or “ORFeomes,” need to be cloned into various expression vectors. To address these issues simultaneously, we have designed and applied to C. elegans the following strategy. Predicted ORFs are amplified by PCR from a highly representative cDNA library using ORF-specific primers, cloned by Gateway recombination cloning and then sequenced to generate ORF sequence tags (OSTs) as a way to verify identity and splicing. In a sample (n=1,222) of the nearly 10,000 genes predicted ab initio (that is, for which no expressed sequence tag (EST) is available so far), at least 70% were verified by OSTs. We also observed that 27% of these experimentally confirmed genes have a structure different from that predicted by GeneFinder. We now have experimental evidence that supports the existence of at least 17,300 genes in C. elegans. Hence we suggest that gene counts based primarily on ESTs may underestimate the number of genes in human and in other organisms.


Science | 2004

A Map of the Interactome Network of the Metazoan C. elegans

Siming Li; Christopher M. Armstrong; Nicolas Bertin; Hui Ge; Mike Boxem; Pierre Olivier Vidalain; Jing Dong J Han; Alban Chesneau; Tong Hao; Debra S. Goldberg; Ning Li; Monica Martinez; Jean François Rual; Philippe Lamesch; Lai Xu; Muneesh Tewari; Sharyl L. Wong; Lan V. Zhang; Gabriel F. Berriz; Laurent Jacotot; Philippe Vaglio; Jérôme Reboul; Tomoko Hirozane-Kishikawa; Qian-Ru Li; Harrison W. Gabel; Ahmed M. Elewa; Bridget Baumgartner; Debra J. Rose; Haiyuan Yu; Stephanie Bosak


Nature Genetics | 2003

C. elegans ORFeome version 1.1: experimental verification of the genome annotation and resource for proteome- scale protein expression

Jérôme Reboul; Philippe Vaglio; Jean François Rual; Philippe Lamesch; Monica Martinez; Christopher M. Armstrong; Siming Li; Laurent Jacotot; Nicolas Bertin; Rekin's Janky; Troy Moore; James R. Hudson; James L. Hartley; Michael A. Brasch; Jean Vandenhaute; Simon J. Boulton; Gregory A. Endress; Sarah Jenna; Eric Chevet; Vasilis Papasotiropoulos; Peter P. Tolias; Jason Ptacek; Michael Snyder; Raymond Huang; Mark R. Chance; Hongmei Lee; Lynn Doucette-Stamm; David E. Hill; Marc Vidal


Genomics | 2007

hORFeome v3.1: A resource of human open reading frames representing over 10,000 human genes

Philippe Lamesch; Ning Li; Changyu Fan; Tong Hao; Gabor Szabo; Zhenjun Hu; Kavitha Venkatesan; Graeme Bethel; Paul Martin; Jane Rogers; Stephanie Lawlor; Stuart McLaren; Amélie Dricot; Heather Borick; Michael E. Cusick; Jean Vandenhaute; Ian Dunham; David E. Hill; Marc Vidal


Genome Research | 2004

Human ORFeome Version 1.1: A Platform for Reverse Proteomics

Jean François Rual; Tomoko Hirozane-Kishikawa; Tong Hao; Nicolas Bertin; Siming Li; Amélie Dricot; Ning Li; Jennifer Rosenberg; Philippe Lamesch; Pierre Olivier Vidalain; Tracey R. Clingingsmith; James L. Hartley; Dominic Esposito; David Cheo; Troy Moore; Blake Simmons; Reynaldo Sequerra; Stephanie Bosak; Lynn Doucette-Stamm; Christian Le Peuch; Jean Vandenhaute; Michael E. Cusick; Joanna S. Albala; David E. Hill; Marc Vidal


Genome Research | 2004

A first version of the Caenorhabditis elegans Promoterome.

Denis Dupuy; Qian-Ru Li; Bart Deplancke; Mike Boxem; Tong Hao; Philippe Lamesch; Reynaldo Sequerra; Stephanie Bosak; Lynn Doucette-Stamm; Ian A. Hope; David E. Hill; Albertha J. M. Walhout; Marc Vidal


Genome Research | 2004

C. elegans ORFeome Version 3.1: Increasing the Coverage of ORFeome Resources With Improved Gene Predictions

Philippe Lamesch; Tong Hao; Jennifer Rosenberg; Ning Li; Reynaldo Sequerra; Stephanie Bosak; Lynn Doucette-Stamm; Jean Vandenhaute; David E. Hill; Marc Vidal


Genome Research | 2004

Generation of the Brucella melitensis ORFeome Version 1.1

Amélie Dricot; Jean François Rual; Philippe Lamesch; Nicolas Bertin; Denis Dupuy; Tong Hao; Christophe Lambert; Régis Hallez; Jean Marc Delroisse; Jean Vandenhaute; Ignacio López-Goñi; Ignacio Moriyón; Juan M. García-Lobo; Félix J. Sangari; Alastair P. MacMillan; Sally J Cutler; Adrian M. Whatmore; Stephanie Bozak; Reynaldo Sequerra; Lynn Doucette-Stamm; Marc Vidal; David E. Hill; Jean-Jacques Letesson; Xavier De Bolle


Genome Research | 2005

Closing in on the C. elegans ORFeome by cloning TWINSCAN predictions

Chaochun Wei; Philippe Lamesch; Manimozhiyan Arumugam; Jennifer Rosenberg; Ping Hu; Marc Vidal; Michael R. Brent

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Lynn Doucette-Stamm

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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