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The Case for Intrinsically Disordered Proteins Playing Contributory Roles in Molecular Recognition Without a Stable 3D Structure

Overview
Journal F1000 Biol Rep
Specialty Biology
Date 2013 Jan 31
PMID 23361308
Citations 44
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Abstract

The classical 'lock-and-key' and 'induced-fit' mechanisms for binding both originated in attempts to explain features of enzyme catalysis. For both of these mechanisms and for their recent refinements, enzyme catalysis requires exquisite spatial and electronic complementarity between the substrate and the catalyst. Thus, binding models derived from models originally based on catalysis will be highly biased towards mechanisms that utilize structural complementarity. If mere binding without catalysis is the endpoint, then the structural requirements for the interaction become much more relaxed. Recent observations on specific examples suggest that this relaxation can reach an extreme lack of specific 3D structure, leading to molecular recognition with biological consequences that depend not only upon structural and electrostatic complementarity between the binding partners but also upon kinetic, entropic, and generalized electrostatic effects. In addition to this discussion of binding without fixed structure, examples in which unstructured regions carry out important biological functions not involving molecular recognition will also be discussed. Finally, we discuss whether 'intrinsically disordered protein' (IDP) represents a useful new concept.

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