info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The role of protein disorder in the 14-3-3 interaction network
Fecha
2012-11Registro en:
Bustos, Diego Martin; The role of protein disorder in the 14-3-3 interaction network; Royal Society of Chemistry; Molecular Biosystems; 8; 1; 11-2012; 178-184
1742-206X
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Bustos, Diego Martin
Resumen
Disordered regions are segments of a protein that do not fold completely and thus remain flexible. These regions have key physiological roles, particularly in phospho-proteins, which are enriched in disorder-promoting residues surrounding their phosphorylation sites. 14-3-3 proteins are ordered hubs that interact with multiple and diverse intrinsically disordered phosphorylated targets. This provides 14-3-3 with the ability to participate in and to regulate multiple signalling networks. Here, I review the effect of structural disorder on the mechanism involved in 14-3-3 protein-protein interactions and how 14-3-3 impacts cell biology through disordered ligands. How 14-3-3 proteins constitute an advantageous system to identify novel classes of biological tools is discussed with a special emphasis on a particular - and innovative - use of small molecules to stabilize 14-3-3 protein complexes, useful to study gene expression, cancer signalling and neurodegenerative diseases.