Cargando…

The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins

BACKGROUND: Our first predictor of protein disorder was published just over a decade ago in the Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks (Romero P, Obradovic Z, Kissinger C, Villafranca JE, Dunker AK (1997) Identifying disordered regions in proteins from amino acid sequenc...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dunker, A Keith, Oldfield, Christopher J, Meng, Jingwei, Romero, Pedro, Yang, Jack Y, Chen, Jessica Walton, Vacic, Vladimir, Obradovic, Zoran, Uversky, Vladimir N
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2559873/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18831774
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-9-S2-S1
_version_ 1782159683458433024
author Dunker, A Keith
Oldfield, Christopher J
Meng, Jingwei
Romero, Pedro
Yang, Jack Y
Chen, Jessica Walton
Vacic, Vladimir
Obradovic, Zoran
Uversky, Vladimir N
author_facet Dunker, A Keith
Oldfield, Christopher J
Meng, Jingwei
Romero, Pedro
Yang, Jack Y
Chen, Jessica Walton
Vacic, Vladimir
Obradovic, Zoran
Uversky, Vladimir N
author_sort Dunker, A Keith
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Our first predictor of protein disorder was published just over a decade ago in the Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks (Romero P, Obradovic Z, Kissinger C, Villafranca JE, Dunker AK (1997) Identifying disordered regions in proteins from amino acid sequence. Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks, 1: 90–95). By now more than twenty other laboratory groups have joined the efforts to improve the prediction of protein disorder. While the various prediction methodologies used for protein intrinsic disorder resemble those methodologies used for secondary structure prediction, the two types of structures are entirely different. For example, the two structural classes have very different dynamic properties, with the irregular secondary structure class being much less mobile than the disorder class. The prediction of secondary structure has been useful. On the other hand, the prediction of intrinsic disorder has been revolutionary, leading to major modifications of the more than 100 year-old views relating protein structure and function. Experimentalists have been providing evidence over many decades that some proteins lack fixed structure or are disordered (or unfolded) under physiological conditions. In addition, experimentalists are also showing that, for many proteins, their functions depend on the unstructured rather than structured state; such results are in marked contrast to the greater than hundred year old views such as the lock and key hypothesis. Despite extensive data on many important examples, including disease-associated proteins, the importance of disorder for protein function has been largely ignored. Indeed, to our knowledge, current biochemistry books don't present even one acknowledged example of a disorder-dependent function, even though some reports of disorder-dependent functions are more than 50 years old. The results from genome-wide predictions of intrinsic disorder and the results from other bioinformatics studies of intrinsic disorder are demanding attention for these proteins. RESULTS: Disorder prediction has been important for showing that the relatively few experimentally characterized examples are members of a very large collection of related disordered proteins that are wide-spread over all three domains of life. Many significant biological functions are now known to depend directly on, or are importantly associated with, the unfolded or partially folded state. Here our goal is to review the key discoveries and to weave these discoveries together to support novel approaches for understanding sequence-function relationships. CONCLUSION: Intrinsically disordered protein is common across the three domains of life, but especially common among the eukaryotic proteomes. Signaling sequences and sites of posttranslational modifications are frequently, or very likely most often, located within regions of intrinsic disorder. Disorder-to-order transitions are coupled with the adoption of different structures with different partners. Also, the flexibility of intrinsic disorder helps different disordered regions to bind to a common binding site on a common partner. Such capacity for binding diversity plays important roles in both protein-protein interaction networks and likely also in gene regulation networks. Such disorder-based signaling is further modulated in multicellular eukaryotes by alternative splicing, for which such splicing events map to regions of disorder much more often than to regions of structure. Associating alternative splicing with disorder rather than structure alleviates theoretical and experimentally observed problems associated with the folding of different length, isomeric amino acid sequences. The combination of disorder and alternative splicing is proposed to provide a mechanism for easily "trying out" different signaling pathways, thereby providing the mechanism for generating signaling diversity and enabling the evolution of cell differentiation and multicellularity. Finally, several recent small molecules of interest as potential drugs have been shown to act by blocking protein-protein interactions based on intrinsic disorder of one of the partners. Study of these examples has led to a new approach for drug discovery, and bioinformatics analysis of the human proteome suggests that various disease-associated proteins are very rich in such disorder-based drug discovery targets.
format Text
id pubmed-2559873
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25598732008-10-04 The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins Dunker, A Keith Oldfield, Christopher J Meng, Jingwei Romero, Pedro Yang, Jack Y Chen, Jessica Walton Vacic, Vladimir Obradovic, Zoran Uversky, Vladimir N BMC Genomics Research BACKGROUND: Our first predictor of protein disorder was published just over a decade ago in the Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks (Romero P, Obradovic Z, Kissinger C, Villafranca JE, Dunker AK (1997) Identifying disordered regions in proteins from amino acid sequence. Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Neural Networks, 1: 90–95). By now more than twenty other laboratory groups have joined the efforts to improve the prediction of protein disorder. While the various prediction methodologies used for protein intrinsic disorder resemble those methodologies used for secondary structure prediction, the two types of structures are entirely different. For example, the two structural classes have very different dynamic properties, with the irregular secondary structure class being much less mobile than the disorder class. The prediction of secondary structure has been useful. On the other hand, the prediction of intrinsic disorder has been revolutionary, leading to major modifications of the more than 100 year-old views relating protein structure and function. Experimentalists have been providing evidence over many decades that some proteins lack fixed structure or are disordered (or unfolded) under physiological conditions. In addition, experimentalists are also showing that, for many proteins, their functions depend on the unstructured rather than structured state; such results are in marked contrast to the greater than hundred year old views such as the lock and key hypothesis. Despite extensive data on many important examples, including disease-associated proteins, the importance of disorder for protein function has been largely ignored. Indeed, to our knowledge, current biochemistry books don't present even one acknowledged example of a disorder-dependent function, even though some reports of disorder-dependent functions are more than 50 years old. The results from genome-wide predictions of intrinsic disorder and the results from other bioinformatics studies of intrinsic disorder are demanding attention for these proteins. RESULTS: Disorder prediction has been important for showing that the relatively few experimentally characterized examples are members of a very large collection of related disordered proteins that are wide-spread over all three domains of life. Many significant biological functions are now known to depend directly on, or are importantly associated with, the unfolded or partially folded state. Here our goal is to review the key discoveries and to weave these discoveries together to support novel approaches for understanding sequence-function relationships. CONCLUSION: Intrinsically disordered protein is common across the three domains of life, but especially common among the eukaryotic proteomes. Signaling sequences and sites of posttranslational modifications are frequently, or very likely most often, located within regions of intrinsic disorder. Disorder-to-order transitions are coupled with the adoption of different structures with different partners. Also, the flexibility of intrinsic disorder helps different disordered regions to bind to a common binding site on a common partner. Such capacity for binding diversity plays important roles in both protein-protein interaction networks and likely also in gene regulation networks. Such disorder-based signaling is further modulated in multicellular eukaryotes by alternative splicing, for which such splicing events map to regions of disorder much more often than to regions of structure. Associating alternative splicing with disorder rather than structure alleviates theoretical and experimentally observed problems associated with the folding of different length, isomeric amino acid sequences. The combination of disorder and alternative splicing is proposed to provide a mechanism for easily "trying out" different signaling pathways, thereby providing the mechanism for generating signaling diversity and enabling the evolution of cell differentiation and multicellularity. Finally, several recent small molecules of interest as potential drugs have been shown to act by blocking protein-protein interactions based on intrinsic disorder of one of the partners. Study of these examples has led to a new approach for drug discovery, and bioinformatics analysis of the human proteome suggests that various disease-associated proteins are very rich in such disorder-based drug discovery targets. BioMed Central 2008-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2559873/ /pubmed/18831774 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-9-S2-S1 Text en Copyright © 2008 Dunker et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Dunker, A Keith
Oldfield, Christopher J
Meng, Jingwei
Romero, Pedro
Yang, Jack Y
Chen, Jessica Walton
Vacic, Vladimir
Obradovic, Zoran
Uversky, Vladimir N
The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins
title The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins
title_full The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins
title_fullStr The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins
title_full_unstemmed The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins
title_short The unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins
title_sort unfoldomics decade: an update on intrinsically disordered proteins
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2559873/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18831774
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-9-S2-S1
work_keys_str_mv AT dunkerakeith theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT oldfieldchristopherj theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT mengjingwei theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT romeropedro theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT yangjacky theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT chenjessicawalton theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT vacicvladimir theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT obradoviczoran theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT uverskyvladimirn theunfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT dunkerakeith unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT oldfieldchristopherj unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT mengjingwei unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT romeropedro unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT yangjacky unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT chenjessicawalton unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT vacicvladimir unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT obradoviczoran unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins
AT uverskyvladimirn unfoldomicsdecadeanupdateonintrinsicallydisorderedproteins