info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Intrinsic disorder is a key characteristic in partners that bind 14-3-3 proteins
Fecha
2006-04Registro en:
Bustos, Diego Martin; Iglesias, Alberto Alvaro; Intrinsic disorder is a key characteristic in partners that bind 14-3-3 proteins; Wiley-liss, Div John Wiley & Sons Inc; Proteins: Structure, Function And Genetics; 63; 1; 4-2006; 35-42
0887-3585
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Bustos, Diego Martin
Iglesias, Alberto Alvaro
Resumen
Proteins named 14-3-3 can bind more than 200 different proteins, mostly (but not exclusively) when they are at a phosphorylated state. These partner proteins are involved in different cellular processes, such as cell signaling, transcription factors, cellular morphology, and metabolism; this suggests pleiotropic functionality for 14-3-3 proteins. Recent efforts to establish a rational classification of 14-3-3 binding partners showed neither structural nor functional relatedness in this group of proteins. Using three natural predictors of disorder in proteins, and the structural available information, we show that >90% of 14-3-3 protein partners contain disordered regions. This percentage is significantly high when compared with recent studies on cell signaling and cancer-related proteins or RNA chaperons. More important, almost all 14-3-3-binding sites are inside disordered regions, this reinforcing the importance of structural disorder in this class of proteins. We also propose that a disorder-to-order transition occurs in the binding of 14-3-3 proteins with their partners. We discuss the consequences of the latter for consensus binding sequences, specificity, affinity, and thermodynamic control.