Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins

<p>Abstract</p> <p>To examine the usefulness of protein disorder predictions as a tool for the comparative analysis of viral proteins, a relational database has been constructed. The database includes proteins from influenza A and HIV-related viruses. Annotations include viral prot...

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Main Authors: Uversky Vladimir N, Dunker A Keith, Goh Gerard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2008-09-01
Series:BMC Genomics
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spelling doaj-a19083be41004823b8717e4f7ce6f3192020-11-25T01:01:33ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642008-09-019Suppl 2S410.1186/1471-2164-9-S2-S4Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteinsUversky Vladimir NDunker A KeithGoh Gerard<p>Abstract</p> <p>To examine the usefulness of protein disorder predictions as a tool for the comparative analysis of viral proteins, a relational database has been constructed. The database includes proteins from influenza A and HIV-related viruses. Annotations include viral protein sequence, disorder prediction, structure, and function. Location of each protein within a virion, if known, is also denoted. Our analysis reveals a clear relationship between proximity to the RNA core and the percentage of predicted disordered residues for a set of influenza A virus proteins.</p> <p>Neuraminidases (NA) and hemagglutinin (HA) of major influenza A pandemics tend to pair in such a way that both proteins tend to be either ordered-ordered or disordered-disordered by prediction. This may be the result of these proteins evolving from being lipid-associated. High abundance of intrinsic disorder in envelope and matrix proteins from HIV-related viruses likely represents a mechanism where HIV virions can escape immune response despite the availability of antibodies for the HIV-related proteins. This exercise provides an example showing how the combined use of intrinsic disorder predictions and relational databases provides an improved understanding of the functional and structural behaviour of viral proteins.</p>
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Uversky Vladimir N
Dunker A Keith
Goh Gerard
spellingShingle Uversky Vladimir N
Dunker A Keith
Goh Gerard
Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins
BMC Genomics
author_facet Uversky Vladimir N
Dunker A Keith
Goh Gerard
author_sort Uversky Vladimir N
title Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins
title_short Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins
title_full Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins
title_fullStr Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins
title_full_unstemmed Protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins
title_sort protein intrinsic disorder toolbox for comparative analysis of viral proteins
publisher BMC
series BMC Genomics
issn 1471-2164
publishDate 2008-09-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>To examine the usefulness of protein disorder predictions as a tool for the comparative analysis of viral proteins, a relational database has been constructed. The database includes proteins from influenza A and HIV-related viruses. Annotations include viral protein sequence, disorder prediction, structure, and function. Location of each protein within a virion, if known, is also denoted. Our analysis reveals a clear relationship between proximity to the RNA core and the percentage of predicted disordered residues for a set of influenza A virus proteins.</p> <p>Neuraminidases (NA) and hemagglutinin (HA) of major influenza A pandemics tend to pair in such a way that both proteins tend to be either ordered-ordered or disordered-disordered by prediction. This may be the result of these proteins evolving from being lipid-associated. High abundance of intrinsic disorder in envelope and matrix proteins from HIV-related viruses likely represents a mechanism where HIV virions can escape immune response despite the availability of antibodies for the HIV-related proteins. This exercise provides an example showing how the combined use of intrinsic disorder predictions and relational databases provides an improved understanding of the functional and structural behaviour of viral proteins.</p>
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