Number of natively unfolded proteins scales with genome size.

Authors

  • Antonio Deiana Physics Department La Sapienza University of Rome
  • Andrea Giansanti Physics Department La Sapienza University of Rome

Keywords:

Natively unfolded proteins, disorder predictors, consensus score

Abstract

Natively unfolded proteins exist as an ensemble of flexible conformations lacking a well defined tertiary structure along a large portion of their polypeptide chain. Despite the absence of a stable configuration, they are involved in important cellular processes. In this work we used three indicators of folding status, derived from the analysis of mean packing and mean contact energy of a protein sequence as well as from VSL2, a disorder predictor, and we combined them into a consensus score to identify natively unfolded proteins in several genomes from Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya. We found a high correlation among the number of predicted natively unfolded proteins and the number of proteins in the genomes. More specifically, the number of natively unfolded proteins scaled with the number of proteins in the genomes, with exponent 1.81 ± 0.10. This scaling law may be important to understand the relation between the number of natively unfolded proteins and their roles in cellular processes.

Author Biographies

Antonio Deiana, Physics Department La Sapienza University of Rome

Graduate student

Andrea Giansanti, Physics Department La Sapienza University of Rome

Researcher

Downloads

Published

01-08-2008

How to Cite

Deiana, A., & Giansanti, A. (2008). Number of natively unfolded proteins scales with genome size. Biophysics and Bioengineering Letters, 1(2). Retrieved from https://rosa.uniroma1.it/rosa00/index.php/biophysics_and_bioengineering/article/view/2780

Issue

Section

Section 2: Biophysics PhD