4.6 Review

Structural Proteomics Methods to Interrogate the Conformations and Dynamics of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins

Journal

FRONTIERS IN CHEMISTRY
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2021.603639

Keywords

mass spectrometry; ion mobility; intrinsically disordered protein; hydrogen-deuterium exchange; crosslinking mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship [MR/T020970/1]
  2. University of Strathclyde
  3. Sir Henry Dale Fellowship - Wellcome Trust [220628/Z/20/Z]
  4. Sir Henry Dale Fellowship - Royal Society [220628/Z/20/Z]
  5. University of Leeds
  6. Wellcome Trust [220628/Z/20/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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Intrinsically disordered proteins and regions of intrinsic disorder play crucial roles in biological processes by overcoming binding restrictions and enhancing binding specificity. Structural mass spectrometry methods are increasingly important for studying these proteins, providing new insights into their structure and function. Their flexibility and advantages make them ideal tools for understanding intrinsically disordered proteins.
Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) and regions of intrinsic disorder (IDRs) are abundant in proteomes and are essential for many biological processes. Thus, they are often implicated in disease mechanisms, including neurodegeneration and cancer. The flexible nature of IDPs and IDRs provides many advantages, including (but not limited to) overcoming steric restrictions in binding, facilitating posttranslational modifications, and achieving high binding specificity with low affinity. IDPs adopt a heterogeneous structural ensemble, in contrast to typical folded proteins, making it challenging to interrogate their structure using conventional tools. Structural mass spectrometry (MS) methods are playing an increasingly important role in characterizing the structure and function of IDPs and IDRs, enabled by advances in the design of instrumentation and the development of new workflows, including in native MS, ion mobility MS, top-down MS, hydrogen-deuterium exchange MS, crosslinking MS, and covalent labeling. Here, we describe the advantages of these methods that make them ideal to study IDPs and highlight recent applications where these tools have underpinned new insights into IDP structure and function that would be difficult to elucidate using other methods.

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