Structural Disorder within Sendai Virus Nucleoprotein and Phosphoprotein: Insight into the Structural Basis of Molecular Recognition

被引:0
|
作者
Jensen, Malene Ringkjobing [1 ]
Bernado, Pau [2 ]
Houben, Klaartje [3 ]
Blanchard, Laurence [4 ]
Marion, Dominque [5 ]
Ruigrok, Rob W. H. [6 ]
Blackledge, Martin [1 ]
机构
[1] CEA CNRS UJF, Inst Biol Struct Jean Pierre Ebel, UMR 5075, F-38027 Grenoble, France
[2] Inst Res Biomed, Barcelona 08028, Spain
[3] Univ Utrecht, Bijvoet Ctr Biomol Res, NL-3584 CH Utrecht, Netherlands
[4] Univ Aix Marseille, CNRS CEA, DSV IBEB SBVME LEMiRE, CEA Cadarache,UMR 6191, F-13108 St Paul Les Durance, France
[5] CEA CNRS UJF, Inst Biol Struct Jean Pierre Ebel, Lab RMN, UMR 5075, F-38027 Grenoble, France
[6] UJF EMBL CNRS, Unit Virus Host Cell Interact, UMI 3265, F-38042 Grenoble, France
来源
PROTEIN AND PEPTIDE LETTERS | 2010年 / 17卷 / 08期
关键词
Intrinsic disorder; Molecular recognition; NMR; Nucleoprotein; Phosphoprotein; Residual dipolar couplings; Sendai virus; RESIDUAL DIPOLAR COUPLINGS; INTRINSICALLY UNSTRUCTURED PROTEINS; NATIVELY UNFOLDED PROTEINS; PARTIALLY FOLDED PROTEINS; ALPHA-HELIX STABILITY; CHEMICAL-SHIFT INDEX; RNA-SYNTHESIS; SECONDARY STRUCTURE; P PROTEIN; BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Intrinsically disordered regions of significant length are present throughout eukaryotic genomes, and are particularly prevalent in viral proteins. Due to their inherent flexibility, these proteins inhabit a conformational landscape that is too complex to be described by classical structural biology. The elucidation of the role that conformational flexibility plays in molecular function will redefine our understanding of the molecular basis of biological function, and the development of appropriate technology to achieve this aim remains one of the major challenges for the future of structural biology. wNMR is the technique of choice for studying intrinsically disordered proteins, providing information about structure, flexibility and interactions at atomic resolution even in completely disordered proteins. In particular residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) are sensitive and powerful tools for determining local and long-range structural behaviour in flexible proteins. Here we describe recent applications of the use of RDCs to quantitatively describe the level of local structure in intrinsically disordered proteins involved in replication and transcription in Sendai virus.
引用
收藏
页码:952 / 960
页数:9
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