» Articles » PMID: 19412530

Prediction of Protein Binding Regions in Disordered Proteins

Overview
Specialty Biology
Date 2009 May 5
PMID 19412530
Citations 282
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Many disordered proteins function via binding to a structured partner and undergo a disorder-to-order transition. The coupled folding and binding can confer several functional advantages such as the precise control of binding specificity without increased affinity. Additionally, the inherent flexibility allows the binding site to adopt various conformations and to bind to multiple partners. These features explain the prevalence of such binding elements in signaling and regulatory processes. In this work, we report ANCHOR, a method for the prediction of disordered binding regions. ANCHOR relies on the pairwise energy estimation approach that is the basis of IUPred, a previous general disorder prediction method. In order to predict disordered binding regions, we seek to identify segments that are in disordered regions, cannot form enough favorable intrachain interactions to fold on their own, and are likely to gain stabilizing energy by interacting with a globular protein partner. The performance of ANCHOR was found to be largely independent from the amino acid composition and adopted secondary structure. Longer binding sites generally were predicted to be segmented, in agreement with available experimentally characterized examples. Scanning several hundred proteomes showed that the occurrence of disordered binding sites increased with the complexity of the organisms even compared to disordered regions in general. Furthermore, the length distribution of binding sites was different from disordered protein regions in general and was dominated by shorter segments. These results underline the importance of disordered proteins and protein segments in establishing new binding regions. Due to their specific biophysical properties, disordered binding sites generally carry a robust sequence signal, and this signal is efficiently captured by our method. Through its generality, ANCHOR opens new ways to study the essential functional sites of disordered proteins.

Citing Articles

A deep learning method for predicting interactions for intrinsically disordered regions of proteins.

Majila K, Ullanat V, Viswanath S bioRxiv. 2025; .

PMID: 39763873 PMC: 11702703. DOI: 10.1101/2024.12.19.629373.


The N-Terminal Region of the Transcription Factor E2F1 Contains a Novel Transactivation Domain and Recruits General Transcription Factor GTF2H2.

Zhao L, Nakajima R, Zhou Y, Shirasawa M, Fikriyanti M, Kamiya Y Biomolecules. 2024; 14(11).

PMID: 39595534 PMC: 11592155. DOI: 10.3390/biom14111357.


The strand exchange domain of tumor suppressor PALB2 is intrinsically disordered and promotes oligomerization-dependent DNA compaction.

Kyriukha Y, Watkins M, Redington J, Chintalapati N, Ganti A, Dastvan R iScience. 2024; 27(12):111259.

PMID: 39584160 PMC: 11582789. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2024.111259.


Computational Prediction of Linear Interacting Peptides.

Malhis N, Gsponer J Methods Mol Biol. 2024; 2867:233-245.

PMID: 39576585 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-4196-5_14.


Landscape of intrinsically disordered proteins in mental disorder diseases.

Zhang X, Song X, Hu G, Yang Y, Liu R, Zhou N Comput Struct Biotechnol J. 2024; 23:3839-3849.

PMID: 39534590 PMC: 11554586. DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2024.10.043.


References
1.
Oldfield C, Meng J, Yang J, Yang M, Uversky V, Dunker A . Flexible nets: disorder and induced fit in the associations of p53 and 14-3-3 with their partners. BMC Genomics. 2008; 9 Suppl 1:S1. PMC: 2386051. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-S1-S1. View

2.
Fuxreiter M, Simon I, Friedrich P, Tompa P . Preformed structural elements feature in partner recognition by intrinsically unstructured proteins. J Mol Biol. 2004; 338(5):1015-26. DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2004.03.017. View

3.
Wu D, Daugherty S, Van Aken S, Pai G, Watkins K, Khouri H . Metabolic complementarity and genomics of the dual bacterial symbiosis of sharpshooters. PLoS Biol. 2006; 4(6):e188. PMC: 1472245. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0040188. View

4.
Preston C, Wu K, Molinski T, Delong E . A psychrophilic crenarchaeon inhabits a marine sponge: Cenarchaeum symbiosum gen. nov., sp. nov. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996; 93(13):6241-6. PMC: 39006. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.93.13.6241. View

5.
Wright P, Dyson H . Intrinsically unstructured proteins: re-assessing the protein structure-function paradigm. J Mol Biol. 1999; 293(2):321-31. DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1999.3110. View