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Functionally Relevant Macromolecular Interactions of Disordered Proteins



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Autore: Simon Istvan Visualizza persona
Titolo: Functionally Relevant Macromolecular Interactions of Disordered Proteins Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020
Descrizione fisica: 1 electronic resource (520 p.)
Soggetto topico: Research & information: general
Biology, life sciences
Soggetto non controllato: intrinsically disordered proteins
epiproteome
disordered protein platform
molecular recognition feature
post-translational modifications
physiological homeostasis
stress response
RIN4
p53
molecular machines
intrinsically disordered protein
membrane-less organelle
neurodegenerative disease
p300 HAT acetylation
post-translational modification
protein aggregation
Tau fibrillation
intrinsically disorder proteins
disorder-to-order regions
protein–RNA interactions
unstructured proteins
conformational plasticity
disordered protein
folding
ribosomal protein
spectroscopy
protein stability
temperature response
protein thermostability
salt bridges
meta strategy
dual threshold
significance voting
decision tree based artificial neural network
protein intrinsic disorder
intrinsic disorder
intrinsic disorder prediction
intrinsically disordered region
protein conformation
transcriptome
RNA sequencing
Microarray
differentially regulated genes
gene ontology analysis
functional analysis
intrinsically disordered
structural disorder
correlated mutations
co-evolution
evolutionary couplings
residue co-variation
interaction surface
residue contact network
dehydron
homodimer
hydrogen bond
inter-subunit interaction
ion pair
mutual synergistic folding
solvent-accessible surface area
stabilization center
MLL proteins
MLL4
lncRNA
HOTAIR
MEG3
leukemia
histone lysine methyltransferase
RNA binding
protein
hydration
wide-line 1H NMR
secretion
immune
extracellular
protein-protein interaction
structural domain
evolution
transcription factors
DNA-protein interactions
Sox2 sequential DNA loading
smFRET
DNA conformational landscape
sequential DNA bending
transcription factor dosage
oligomer
N-terminal prion protein
copper binding
prion disease mutations
Nuclear pore complex
FG-Nups
phosphorylation
coarse-grained
CABS model
MC simulations
statistical force fields
protein structure
intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs)
neurodegenerative diseases
aggregation
drugs
drug discovery
plant virus
eIF4E
VPg
potyvirus
molten globule
fluorescence anisotropy
protein hydrodynamics
Persona (resp. second.): SimonIstvan
Sommario/riassunto: Disordered proteins are relatively recent newcomers in protein science. They were first described in detail by Wright and Dyson, in their J. Mol. Biol. paper in 1999. First, it was generally thought for more than a decade that disordered proteins or disordered parts of proteins have different amino acid compositions than folded proteins, and various prediction methods were developed based on this principle. These methods were suitable for distinguishing between the disordered (unstructured) and structured proteins known at that time. In addition, they could predict the site where a folded protein binds to the disordered part of a protein, shaping the latter into a well-defined 3D structure. Recently, however, evidence has emerged for a new type of disordered protein family whose members can undergo coupled folding and binding without the involvement of any folded proteins. Instead, they interact with each other, stabilizing their structure via “mutual synergistic folding” and, surprisingly, they exhibit the same residue composition as the folded protein. Increasingly more examples have been found where disordered proteins interact with non-protein macromolecules, adding to the already large variety of protein–protein interactions. There is also a very new phenomenon when proteins are involved in phase separation, which can represent a weak but functionally important macromolecular interaction. These phenomena are presented and discussed in the chapters of this book.
Titolo autorizzato: Functionally Relevant Macromolecular Interactions of Disordered Proteins  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910557509403321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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