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Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops

Natively unstructured or disordered protein regions may increase the functional complexity of an organism; they are particularly abundant in eukaryotes and often evade structure determination. Many computational methods predict unstructured regions by training on outliers in otherwise well-ordered s...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schlessinger, Avner, Liu, Jinfeng, Rost, Burkhard
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1924875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17658943
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030140
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author Schlessinger, Avner
Liu, Jinfeng
Rost, Burkhard
author_facet Schlessinger, Avner
Liu, Jinfeng
Rost, Burkhard
author_sort Schlessinger, Avner
collection PubMed
description Natively unstructured or disordered protein regions may increase the functional complexity of an organism; they are particularly abundant in eukaryotes and often evade structure determination. Many computational methods predict unstructured regions by training on outliers in otherwise well-ordered structures. Here, we introduce an approach that uses a neural network in a very different and novel way. We hypothesize that very long contiguous segments with nonregular secondary structure (NORS regions) differ significantly from regular, well-structured loops, and that a method detecting such features could predict natively unstructured regions. Training our new method, NORSnet, on predicted information rather than on experimental data yielded three major advantages: it removed the overlap between testing and training, it systematically covered entire proteomes, and it explicitly focused on one particular aspect of unstructured regions with a simple structural interpretation, namely that they are loops. Our hypothesis was correct: well-structured and unstructured loops differ so substantially that NORSnet succeeded in their distinction. Benchmarks on previously used and new experimental data of unstructured regions revealed that NORSnet performed very well. Although it was not the best single prediction method, NORSnet was sufficiently accurate to flag unstructured regions in proteins that were previously not annotated. In one application, NORSnet revealed previously undetected unstructured regions in putative targets for structural genomics and may thereby contribute to increasing structural coverage of large eukaryotic families. NORSnet found unstructured regions more often in domain boundaries than expected at random. In another application, we estimated that 50%–70% of all worm proteins observed to have more than seven protein–protein interaction partners have unstructured regions. The comparative analysis between NORSnet and DISOPRED2 suggested that long unstructured loops are a major part of unstructured regions in molecular networks.
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spelling pubmed-19248752007-07-26 Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops Schlessinger, Avner Liu, Jinfeng Rost, Burkhard PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Natively unstructured or disordered protein regions may increase the functional complexity of an organism; they are particularly abundant in eukaryotes and often evade structure determination. Many computational methods predict unstructured regions by training on outliers in otherwise well-ordered structures. Here, we introduce an approach that uses a neural network in a very different and novel way. We hypothesize that very long contiguous segments with nonregular secondary structure (NORS regions) differ significantly from regular, well-structured loops, and that a method detecting such features could predict natively unstructured regions. Training our new method, NORSnet, on predicted information rather than on experimental data yielded three major advantages: it removed the overlap between testing and training, it systematically covered entire proteomes, and it explicitly focused on one particular aspect of unstructured regions with a simple structural interpretation, namely that they are loops. Our hypothesis was correct: well-structured and unstructured loops differ so substantially that NORSnet succeeded in their distinction. Benchmarks on previously used and new experimental data of unstructured regions revealed that NORSnet performed very well. Although it was not the best single prediction method, NORSnet was sufficiently accurate to flag unstructured regions in proteins that were previously not annotated. In one application, NORSnet revealed previously undetected unstructured regions in putative targets for structural genomics and may thereby contribute to increasing structural coverage of large eukaryotic families. NORSnet found unstructured regions more often in domain boundaries than expected at random. In another application, we estimated that 50%–70% of all worm proteins observed to have more than seven protein–protein interaction partners have unstructured regions. The comparative analysis between NORSnet and DISOPRED2 suggested that long unstructured loops are a major part of unstructured regions in molecular networks. Public Library of Science 2007-07 2007-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC1924875/ /pubmed/17658943 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030140 Text en © 2007 Schlessinger et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Schlessinger, Avner
Liu, Jinfeng
Rost, Burkhard
Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops
title Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops
title_full Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops
title_fullStr Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops
title_full_unstemmed Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops
title_short Natively Unstructured Loops Differ from Other Loops
title_sort natively unstructured loops differ from other loops
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1924875/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17658943
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030140
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