p53 – protein with folded, disordered and context-dependent regions
Figure 1. prediction for human P53 (Uniprot ID: P04637) as
available from the web server with added annotation based on the UniProtKB1. The locations of the two
well-folded domains (the DNA-binding and the tetramerization domains) are marked by dark-grey bars, while the
known interaction sites of different types are indicated by bars in different shades of red.
CBP – large protein with folded domains interspersed by disordered regions
Figure 2. prediction for the human CREB-binding protein,
CBP (UniProt ID: Q92793). CBP is a large, multi-domain transcriptional coactivator. The locations of the
well-folded domains (adopted from [2]) are indicated by dark-grey bars on the top, with the region
corresponding to a large, flexible loop in the HAT domain colored lighter grey. The only molten globule, NCBD is
depicted by a dark-green bar, while the N-terminal NRID interaction motif is shown in red.
Calpastatin – protein that folds upon binding (context-dependent)
Figure 3. prediction for human calpastatin (UniProt ID:
P20810), the inhibitor of calpain. Calpastatin is composed of an N-teminal, functionally uncharacterized region
and four tandem disordered domains (white bars on the top), each of them capable to bind one calpain molecule.
Within one such domain there are three regions that fold up on the surface of calpain, A, B and C (the
corresponding regions are indicated by red bars and the structure of the complex (PDB: 3DF03) is
shown in the top left corner). The D regions are similarly conserved as the A, B and C regions, but they have
not been shown to bind calpain so far4.
Human dopamine receptor – transmembrane protein
Figure 4. prediction for the human D(4) dopamine receptor,
DRD4. DRD4 (UniProt ID: P21917) is a multi-pass membrane protein belonging to the G-protein coupled receptor 1
family. The UniProt-annotated transmembrane regions are marked by blue bars, while a 112 residues long repeat
region (consisting of 7 tandem repeats of 16 residues) is indicated by a yellow bar above the prediction curve.
This protein presents dynamics extremities, since its membrane regions are highly rigid, while its repeat region
is largely flexible.
Examples to illustrate the relationship between Dynamine predictions and experimental S2
values
Figure 5. Example of the well-structured CtCBM11 protein
(bmr18389,
PDB
2lrp) which is not included in the DynaMine training set. The values in blue are experimental
S2 values, as determined by NMR spin relaxation experiments, the DynaMine predictions are in red.
Although the correlations are not good for high S2 values, there is a considerable agreement for
lower values. There are several reasons for this: DynaMine predicts the statistical potential for a protein to
adopt backbone dynamics, does not account for context dependence, and covers a timescale from femto up to micro-
and possible low milliseconds. The actual S2 values are recorded for the protein in a particular
(local) context and cover only fast (femto- to nanosecond) dynamics. For interpretation, the points with
predicted values above 0.8 are highly likely to be rigid, the points below 0.69 are highly likely to be
flexible, whereas points in the intermediate zone have context-dependent dynamics. In this globular protein they
are also generally high; in the absence of highly structured regions in the protein those areas would more
likely be flexible.
Figure 6. Comparison between DynaMine predictions and
experimental S2 for PSE-4 protein (bmr6838)
(see also Figure 5 caption).
References
- UniProt, C. (2014) Activities at the Universal Protein Resource (UniProt). Nucleic Acids Res, 42,
D191-198.
- Dyson, H. J. & Wright, P. E. Intrinsically unstructured proteins and their functions. Nat Rev Mol Cell
Biol 6, 197-208 (2005).
- Moldoveanu, T. et al. Concerted multi-pronged attack by calpastatin to occlude the catalytic cleft of
heterodimeric calpains. Nature 456.7220 (2008): 404-408.
- Kiss, R. et al. Local Structural Preferences of Calpastatin, the Intrinsically Unstructured Protein
Inhibitor of Calpain. Biochemistry 47 (26), 6936-6945 (2008).