Affiliation:
1. National Key Laboratory of Agricultural Microbiology, Biotechnology Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural
Sciences, Beijing 100081, China
Abstract
Introduction:
Intrinsically Disordered Proteins (IDPs) are active in different cellular
procedures like ordered assembly of chromatin and ribosomes, interaction with membrane, protein,
and ligand binding, molecular recognition, binding, and transportation via nuclear pores, microfilaments
and microtubules process and disassembly, protein functions, RNA chaperone, and
nucleic acid binding, modulation of the central dogma, cell cycle, and other cellular activities,
post-translational qualification and substitute splicing, and flexible entropic linker and management
of signaling pathways.
Methods:
The intrinsic disorder is a precise structural characteristic that permits IDPs/IDPRs to be
involved in both one-to-many and many-to-one signaling. IDPs/IDPRs also exert some dynamical
and structural ordering, being much less constrained in their activities than folded proteins. Nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a major technique for the characterization of
IDPs, and it can be used for dynamic and structural studies of IDPs.
Results and Conclusion:
This review was carried out to discuss intrinsically disordered proteins
and their different goals, as well as the importance and effectiveness of NMR in characterizing intrinsically
disordered proteins in healthy and diseased states.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.