Literature DB >> 11381529

Intrinsically disordered protein.

A K Dunker1, J D Lawson, C J Brown, R M Williams, P Romero, J S Oh, C J Oldfield, A M Campen, C M Ratliff, K W Hipps, J Ausio, M S Nissen, R Reeves, C Kang, C R Kissinger, R W Bailey, M D Griswold, W Chiu, E C Garner, Z Obradovic.   

Abstract

Proteins can exist in a trinity of structures: the ordered state, the molten globule, and the random coil. The five following examples suggest that native protein structure can correspond to any of the three states (not just the ordered state) and that protein function can arise from any of the three states and their transitions. (1) In a process that likely mimics infection, fd phage converts from the ordered into the disordered molten globular state. (2) Nucleosome hyperacetylation is crucial to DNA replication and transcription; this chemical modification greatly increases the net negative charge of the nucleosome core particle. We propose that the increased charge imbalance promotes its conversion to a much less rigid form. (3) Clusterin contains an ordered domain and also a native molten globular region. The molten globular domain likely functions as a proteinaceous detergent for cell remodeling and removal of apoptotic debris. (4) In a critical signaling event, a helix in calcineurin becomes bound and surrounded by calmodulin, thereby turning on calcineurin's serine/threonine phosphatase activity. Locating the calcineurin helix within a region of disorder is essential for enabling calmodulin to surround its target upon binding. (5) Calsequestrin regulates calcium levels in the sarcoplasmic reticulum by binding approximately 50 ions/molecule. Disordered polyanion tails at the carboxy terminus bind many of these calcium ions, perhaps without adopting a unique structure. In addition to these examples, we will discuss 16 more proteins with native disorder. These disordered regions include molecular recognition domains, protein folding inhibitors, flexible linkers, entropic springs, entropic clocks, and entropic bristles. Motivated by such examples of intrinsic disorder, we are studying the relationships between amino acid sequence and order/disorder, and from this information we are predicting intrinsic order/disorder from amino acid sequence. The sequence-structure relationships indicate that disorder is an encoded property, and the predictions strongly suggest that proteins in nature are much richer in intrinsic disorder than are those in the Protein Data Bank. Recent predictions on 29 genomes indicate that proteins from eucaryotes apparently have more intrinsic disorder than those from either bacteria or archaea, with typically > 30% of eucaryotic proteins having disordered regions of length > or = 50 consecutive residues.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11381529     DOI: 10.1016/s1093-3263(00)00138-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Graph Model        ISSN: 1093-3263            Impact factor:   2.518


  773 in total

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2.  Improved amino acid flexibility parameters.

Authors:  David K Smith; Predrag Radivojac; Zoran Obradovic; A Keith Dunker; Guang Zhu
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2003-05       Impact factor: 6.725

3.  Increased phospholipase A2 activity with phosphorylation of peroxiredoxin 6 requires a conformational change in the protein.

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4.  Stable and metastable states of human amylin in solution.

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5.  Energetics and kinetics of substrate analog-coupled staphylococcal nuclease folding revealed by a statistical mechanical approach.

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Review 6.  Beyond modules and hubs: the potential of gene coexpression networks for investigating molecular mechanisms of complex brain disorders.

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Review 8.  Recent advances in MeCP2 structure and function.

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9.  Composition Profiler: a tool for discovery and visualization of amino acid composition differences.

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10.  PAGE4 and Conformational Switching: Insights from Molecular Dynamics Simulations and Implications for Prostate Cancer.

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