4.7 Article

The Role of Low Complexity Regions in Protein Interaction Modes: An Illustration in Huntingtin

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22041727

Keywords

low complexity regions; intrinsically disordered regions; compositionally biased regions; homorepeats; Huntingtin; protein interactions

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [AN 735/4-1]
  2. COST Association (Cost Action) [BM1405]

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Low complexity regions (LCRs) are common in protein sequences, less evolutionarily conserved and facilitate protein interactions in eukaryotes, especially those with complex tissue distribution. Evolutionary studies can evaluate the importance and function of LCRs, and multiple modes of LCR-mediated protein-protein interactions can be detected with a large hub protein like HTT when sufficient protein interaction data is available.
Low complexity regions (LCRs) are very frequent in protein sequences, generally having a lower propensity to form structured domains and tending to be much less evolutionarily conserved than globular domains. Their higher abundance in eukaryotes and in species with more cellular types agrees with a growing number of reports on their function in protein interactions regulated by post-translational modifications. LCRs facilitate the increase of regulatory and network complexity required with the emergence of organisms with more complex tissue distribution and development. Although the low conservation and structural flexibility of LCRs complicate their study, evolutionary studies of proteins across species have been used to evaluate their significance and function. To investigate how to apply this evolutionary approach to the study of LCR function in protein-protein interactions, we performed a detailed analysis for Huntingtin (HTT), a large protein that is a hub for interaction with hundreds of proteins, has a variety of LCRs, and for which partial structural information (in complex with HAP40) is available. We hypothesize that proteins RASA1, SYN2, and KAT2B may compete with HAP40 for their attachment to the core of HTT using similar LCRs. Our results illustrate how evolution might favor the interplay of LCRs with domains, and the possibility of detecting multiple modes of LCR-mediated protein-protein interactions with a large hub such as HTT when enough protein interaction data is available.

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