Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.

Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) or proteins with disordered regions (IDRs) do not have a well-defined tertiary structure, but perform a multitude of functions, often relying on their native disorder to achieve the binding flexibility through changing to alternative conformations. Intrinsic...

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Main Authors: Adam M Szalkowski, Maria Anisimova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3103576?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a06b34faf9a14e4cae80697a70cf34872020-11-24T22:16:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0165e2048810.1371/journal.pone.0020488Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.Adam M SzalkowskiMaria AnisimovaIntrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) or proteins with disordered regions (IDRs) do not have a well-defined tertiary structure, but perform a multitude of functions, often relying on their native disorder to achieve the binding flexibility through changing to alternative conformations. Intrinsic disorder is frequently found in all three kingdoms of life, and may occur in short stretches or span whole proteins. To date most studies contrasting the differences between ordered and disordered proteins focused on simple summary statistics. Here, we propose an evolutionary approach to study IDPs, and contrast patterns specific to ordered protein regions and the corresponding IDRs.Two empirical Markov models of amino acid substitutions were estimated, based on a large set of multiple sequence alignments with experimentally verified annotations of disordered regions from the DisProt database of IDPs. We applied new methods to detect differences in Markovian evolution and evolutionary rates between IDRs and the corresponding ordered protein regions. Further, we investigated the distribution of IDPs among functional categories, biochemical pathways and their preponderance to contain tandem repeats.We find significant differences in the evolution between ordered and disordered regions of proteins. Most importantly we find that disorder promoting amino acids are more conserved in IDRs, indicating that in some cases not only amino acid composition but the specific sequence is important for function. This conjecture is also reinforced by the observation that for of our data set IDRs evolve more slowly than the ordered parts of the proteins, while we still support the common view that IDRs in general evolve more quickly. The improvement in model fit indicates a possible improvement for various types of analyses e.g. de novo disorder prediction using a phylogenetic Hidden Markov Model based on our matrices showed a performance similar to other disorder predictors.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3103576?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adam M Szalkowski
Maria Anisimova
spellingShingle Adam M Szalkowski
Maria Anisimova
Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Adam M Szalkowski
Maria Anisimova
author_sort Adam M Szalkowski
title Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.
title_short Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.
title_full Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.
title_fullStr Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.
title_full_unstemmed Markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.
title_sort markov models of amino acid substitution to study proteins with intrinsically disordered regions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) or proteins with disordered regions (IDRs) do not have a well-defined tertiary structure, but perform a multitude of functions, often relying on their native disorder to achieve the binding flexibility through changing to alternative conformations. Intrinsic disorder is frequently found in all three kingdoms of life, and may occur in short stretches or span whole proteins. To date most studies contrasting the differences between ordered and disordered proteins focused on simple summary statistics. Here, we propose an evolutionary approach to study IDPs, and contrast patterns specific to ordered protein regions and the corresponding IDRs.Two empirical Markov models of amino acid substitutions were estimated, based on a large set of multiple sequence alignments with experimentally verified annotations of disordered regions from the DisProt database of IDPs. We applied new methods to detect differences in Markovian evolution and evolutionary rates between IDRs and the corresponding ordered protein regions. Further, we investigated the distribution of IDPs among functional categories, biochemical pathways and their preponderance to contain tandem repeats.We find significant differences in the evolution between ordered and disordered regions of proteins. Most importantly we find that disorder promoting amino acids are more conserved in IDRs, indicating that in some cases not only amino acid composition but the specific sequence is important for function. This conjecture is also reinforced by the observation that for of our data set IDRs evolve more slowly than the ordered parts of the proteins, while we still support the common view that IDRs in general evolve more quickly. The improvement in model fit indicates a possible improvement for various types of analyses e.g. de novo disorder prediction using a phylogenetic Hidden Markov Model based on our matrices showed a performance similar to other disorder predictors.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3103576?pdf=render
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