The role of intrinsically unstructured proteins in neurodegenerative diseases

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Abstract

The number and importance of intrinsically disordered proteins (IUP), known to be involved in various human disorders, are growing rapidly. To test for the generalized implications of intrinsic disorders in proteins involved in Neurodegenerative diseases, disorder prediction tools have been applied to three datasets comprising of proteins involved in Huntington Disease (HD), Parkinson's disease (PD), Alzheimer's disease (AD). Results show, in general, proteins in disease datasets possess significantly enhanced intrinsic unstructuredness. Most of these disordered proteins in the disease datasets are found to be involved in neuronal activities, signal transduction, apoptosis, intracellular traffic, cell differentiation etc. Also these proteins are found to have more number of interactors and hence as the proportion of disorderedness (i.e., the length of the unfolded stretch) increased, the size of the interaction network simultaneously increased. All these observations reflect that, "Moonlighting" i.e. the contextual acquisition of different structural conformations (transient), eventually may allow these disordered proteins to act as network "hubs" and thus they may have crucial influences in the pathogenecity of neurodegenerative diseases. © 2009 Raychaudhuri et al.

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Raychaudhuri, S., Dey, S., Bhattacharyya, N. P., & Mukhopadhyay, D. (2009). The role of intrinsically unstructured proteins in neurodegenerative diseases. PLoS ONE, 4(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005566

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