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Comparative Study
. 2004 Jan;13(1):71-80.
doi: 10.1110/ps.03128904.

Protein flexibility and intrinsic disorder

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Protein flexibility and intrinsic disorder

Predrag Radivojac et al. Protein Sci. 2004 Jan.

Abstract

Comparisons were made among four categories of protein flexibility: (1) low-B-factor ordered regions, (2) high-B-factor ordered regions, (3) short disordered regions, and (4) long disordered regions. Amino acid compositions of the four categories were found to be significantly different from each other, with high-B-factor ordered and short disordered regions being the most similar pair. The high-B-factor (flexible) ordered regions are characterized by a higher average flexibility index, higher average hydrophilicity, higher average absolute net charge, and higher total charge than disordered regions. The low-B-factor regions are significantly enriched in hydrophobic residues and depleted in the total number of charged residues compared to the other three categories. We examined the predictability of the high-B-factor regions and developed a predictor that discriminates between regions of low and high B-factors. This predictor achieved an accuracy of 70% and a correlation of 0.43 with experimental data, outperforming the 64% accuracy and 0.32 correlation of predictors based solely on flexibility indices. To further clarify the differences between short disordered regions and ordered regions, a predictor of short disordered regions was developed. Its relatively high accuracy of 81% indicates considerable differences between ordered and disordered regions. The distinctive amino acid biases of high-B-factor ordered regions, short disordered regions, and long disordered regions indicate that the sequence determinants for these flexibility categories differ from one another, whereas the significantly-greater-than-chance predictability of these categories from sequence suggest that flexible ordered regions, short disorder, and long disorder are, to a significant degree, encoded at the primary structure level.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Amino acid compositions of various data sets. The composition of each amino acid of a reference data set of ordered proteins, Globular-3D, is subtracted from the composition of the four sets described herein; thus, negative peaks indicate depletions compared to the ordered reference set, and positive peaks represent enrichments. The order of the amino acids along the x-axis is from the most buried (left) to the most exposed (right) in typical globular proteins. Error bars indicate one standard deviation. Methionine at the N terminus and His-tags were not included in calculations.

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