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Protein disorder and short conserved motifs in disordered regions are enriched near the cytoplasmic side of single-pass transmembrane proteins
Date Issued
2012-09-04
Date Available
2013-04-08T15:56:56Z
Abstract
Intracellular juxtamembrane regions of transmembrane proteins play pivotal roles in cell signalling, mediated by protein-protein interactions. Disordered protein regions, and short conserved motifs within them, are emerging as key determinants of many such interactions. Here, we investigated whether disorder and conserved motifs are enriched in the juxtamembrane area of human single-pass transmembrane proteins. Conserved motifs were defined as short disordered regions that were much more conserved than the adjacent disordered residues. Human single-pass proteins had higher mean disorder in their cytoplasmic segments than their extracellular parts. Some, but not all, of this effect reflected the shorter length of the cytoplasmic tail. A peak of cytoplasmic disorder was seen at around 30 residues from the membrane. We noted a significant increase in the incidence of conserved motifs within the disordered regions at the same location, even after correcting for the extent of disorder. We conclude that elevated disorder within the cytoplasmic tail of many transmembrane proteins is likely to be associated with enrichment for signalling interactions mediated by conserved short motifs.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
PLOS
Journal
PLoS ONE
Volume
7
Issue
9
Start Page
e44389
Copyright (Published Version)
2012, Stavropoulos et al.
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
journal.pone.0044389.pdf
Size
1.88 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
257ebe696ccabaf93dc203dc77d8a1b4
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