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Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

Intrinsically Disordered Protein Region

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Looking At The Pathogenesis Of The Rabies Lyssavirus Strain Pasteur Vaccins Through A Prism Of The Disorder-Based Bioinformatics, Surya Dhulipala, Vladimir N. Uversky Jan 2022

Looking At The Pathogenesis Of The Rabies Lyssavirus Strain Pasteur Vaccins Through A Prism Of The Disorder-Based Bioinformatics, Surya Dhulipala, Vladimir N. Uversky

Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

Rabies is a neurological disease that causes between 40,000 and 70,000 deaths every year. Once a rabies patient has become symptomatic, there is no effective treatment for the illness, and in unvaccinated individuals, the case-fatality rate of rabies is close to 100%. French scientists Louis Pasteur and Émile Roux developed the first vaccine for rabies in 1885. If administered before the virus reaches the brain, the modern rabies vaccine imparts long-lasting immunity to the virus and saves more than 250,000 people every year. However, the rabies virus can suppress the host’s immune response once it has entered the cells of …


Theater In The Self-Cleaning Cell: Intrinsically Disordered Proteins Or Protein Regions Acting With Membranes In Autophagy, Hana Popelka, Vladimir N. Uversky Jan 2022

Theater In The Self-Cleaning Cell: Intrinsically Disordered Proteins Or Protein Regions Acting With Membranes In Autophagy, Hana Popelka, Vladimir N. Uversky

Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

Intrinsically disordered proteins and protein regions (IDPs/IDPRs) are mainly involved in signaling pathways, where fast regulation, temporal interactions, promiscuous interactions, and assemblies of structurally diverse components including membranes are essential. The autophagy pathway builds, de novo, a membrane organelle, the autophagosome, using carefully orchestrated interactions between proteins and lipid bilayers. Here, we discuss molecular mechanisms related to the protein disorder-based interactions of the autophagy machinery with membranes. We describe not only membrane binding phenomenon, but also examples of membrane remodeling processes including membrane tethering, bending, curvature sensing, and/or fragmentation of membrane organelles such as the endoplasmic reticulum, which is an …


Intrinsic Disorder In Tetratricopeptide Repeat Proteins, Nathan W. Bibber, Cornelia Haerle, Roy Khalifa, Bin Xue, Vladimir N. Uversky Jan 2020

Intrinsic Disorder In Tetratricopeptide Repeat Proteins, Nathan W. Bibber, Cornelia Haerle, Roy Khalifa, Bin Xue, Vladimir N. Uversky

Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

Among the realm of repeat containing proteins that commonly serve as “scaffolds” promoting protein-protein interactions, there is a family of proteins containing between 2 and 20 tetratricopeptide repeats (TPRs), which are functional motifs consisting of 34 amino acids. The most distinguishing feature of TPR domains is their ability to stack continuously one upon the other, with these stacked repeats being able to affect interaction with binding partners either sequentially or in combination. It is known that many repeat-containing proteins are characterized by high levels of intrinsic disorder, and that many protein tandem repeats can be intrinsically disordered. Furthermore, it seems …


Intrinsic Disorder-Based Emergence In Cellular Biology: Physiological And Pathological Liquid-Liquid Phase Transitions In Cells, April L. Darling, Boris Zaslavsky, Vladimir N. Uversky Jan 2019

Intrinsic Disorder-Based Emergence In Cellular Biology: Physiological And Pathological Liquid-Liquid Phase Transitions In Cells, April L. Darling, Boris Zaslavsky, Vladimir N. Uversky

Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

The visible outcome of liquid-liquid phase transitions (LLPTs) in cells is the formation and disintegration of various proteinaceous membrane-less organelles (PMLOs). Although LLPTs and related PMLOs have been observed in living cells for over 200 years, the physiological functions of these transitions (also known as liquid-liquid phase separation, LLPS) are just starting to be understood. While unveiling the functionality of these transitions is important, they have come into light more recently due to the association of abnormal LLPTs with various pathological conditions. In fact, several maladies, such as various cancers, different neurodegenerative diseases, and cardiovascular diseases, are known to be …


Supramolecular Fuzziness Of Intracellular Liquid Droplets: Liquid–Liquid Phase Transitions, Membrane-Less Organelles, And Intrinsic Disorder, Vladimir N. Uversky Jan 2019

Supramolecular Fuzziness Of Intracellular Liquid Droplets: Liquid–Liquid Phase Transitions, Membrane-Less Organelles, And Intrinsic Disorder, Vladimir N. Uversky

Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

Cells are inhomogeneously crowded, possessing a wide range of intracellular liquid droplets abundantly present in the cytoplasm of eukaryotic and bacterial cells, in the mitochondrial matrix and nucleoplasm of eukaryotes, and in the chloroplast’s stroma of plant cells. These proteinaceous membrane-less organelles (PMLOs) not only represent a natural method of intracellular compartmentalization, which is crucial for successful execution of various biological functions, but also serve as important means for the processing of local information and rapid response to the fluctuations in environmental conditions. Since PMLOs, being complex macromolecular assemblages, possess many characteristic features of liquids, they represent highly dynamic (or …


Intrinsic Disorder Of The Baf Complex: Roles In Chromatin Remodeling And Disease Development, Nashwa El Hadidy, Vladimir N. Uversky Jan 2019

Intrinsic Disorder Of The Baf Complex: Roles In Chromatin Remodeling And Disease Development, Nashwa El Hadidy, Vladimir N. Uversky

Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

The two-meter-long DNA is compressed into chromatin in the nucleus of every cell, which serves as a significant barrier to transcription. Therefore, for processes such as replication and transcription to occur, the highly compacted chromatin must be relaxed, and the processes required for chromatin reorganization for the aim of replication or transcription are controlled by ATP-dependent nucleosome remodelers. One of the most highly studied remodelers of this kind is the BRG1- or BRM-associated factor complex (BAF complex, also known as SWItch/sucrose non-fermentable (SWI/SNF) complex), which is crucial for the regulation of gene expression and differentiation in eukaryotes. Chromatin remodeling complex …


Intrinsic Disorder In Proteins With Pathogenic Repeat Expansions, April L. Darling, Vladimir N. Uversky Jan 2017

Intrinsic Disorder In Proteins With Pathogenic Repeat Expansions, April L. Darling, Vladimir N. Uversky

Molecular Medicine Faculty Publications

Intrinsically disordered proteins and proteins with intrinsically disordered regions have been shown to be highly prevalent in disease. Furthermore, disease-causing expansions of the regions containing tandem amino acid repeats often push repetitive proteins towards formation of irreversible aggregates. In fact, in disease-relevant proteins, the increased repeat length often positively correlates with the increased aggregation efficiency and the increased disease severity and penetrance, being negatively correlated with the age of disease onset. The major categories of repeat extensions involved in disease include poly-glutamine and poly-alanine homorepeats, which are often times located in the intrinsically disordered regions, as well as repeats in …