| Literature DB >> 27662088 |
Agnes Toth-Petroczy1, Perry Palmedo2, John Ingraham1, Thomas A Hopf1, Bonnie Berger3, Chris Sander4, Debora S Marks5.
Abstract
Protein flexibility ranges from simple hinge movements to functional disorder. Around half of all human proteins contain apparently disordered regions with little 3D or functional information, and many of these proteins are associated with disease. Building on the evolutionary couplings approach previously successful in predicting 3D states of ordered proteins and RNA, we developed a method to predict the potential for ordered states for all apparently disordered proteins with sufficiently rich evolutionary information. The approach is highly accurate (79%) for residue interactions as tested in more than 60 known disordered regions captured in a bound or specific condition. Assessing the potential for structure of more than 1,000 apparently disordered regions of human proteins reveals a continuum of structural order with at least 50% with clear propensity for three- or two-dimensional states. Co-evolutionary constraints reveal hitherto unseen structures of functional importance in apparently disordered proteins.Entities:
Keywords: EVfold; Evolutionary couplings; bioinformatics; computational biology; conformational flexibility; disorder; maximum entropy; statistical physics; structure prediction
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27662088 PMCID: PMC5451116 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2016.09.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582