Reprint

The Conformational Universe of Proteins and Peptides: Tales of Order and Disorder

Edited by
November 2021
248 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-2352-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-2351-4 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue The Conformational Universe of Proteins and Peptides: Tales of Order and Disorder that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Medicine & Pharmacology
Summary

Proteins represent one of the most abundant classes of biological macromolecules and play crucial roles in a vast array of physiological and pathological processes. The knowledge of the 3D structure of a protein, as well as the possible conformational transitions occurring upon interaction with diverse ligands, are essential to fully comprehend its biological function. In addition to globular, well-folded proteins, over the past few years, intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs) have received a lot of attention. IDPs are usually aggregation-prone and may form toxic amyloid fibers and oligomers associated with several human pathologies. Peptides are smaller in size than proteins but similarly represent key elements of cells. A few peptides are able to work as tumor markers and find applications in the diagnostic and therapeutic fields. The conformational analysis of bioactive peptides is important to design novel potential drugs acting as selective modulators of specific receptors or enzymes. Nevertheless, synthetic peptides reproducing different protein fragments have frequently been implemented as model systems in folding studies relying on structural investigations in water and/or other environments.

This book contains contributions (seven original research articles and five reviews published in the journal Molecules) on the above-described topics and, in detail, it includes structural studies on globular folded proteins, IDPs and bioactive peptides. These works were conducted using different experimental methods.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
mass spectrometric epitope mapping; gas phase immune complex dissociation; apparent gas phase dissociation constants; apparent gas phase activation energies; ITEM-TWO; native mass spectrometry; TRIOBP; cancer; deafness; hearing loss; mental illness; schizophrenia; actin; cytoskeleton; disordered structure; protein aggregation; solid-state NMR; ELDOR-detected NMR; ATP hydrolysis; ATP analogues; DnaB helicase; ABC transporter; biopesticides; antifungal activity; insecticidal activity; mechanism of action; transgenic crops; protein folding; NMR; High Hydrostatic Pressure; ACE2; viral spike receptor-binding domain; SARS-CoV-2; transmission; bioinformatics; IDP 1; binding 2; molecular dynamics 3; MELD×MD 4; advanced sampling 5; p53 6; MDM2 7; NAD(P)H-dependent oxidoreductase; zinc-containing alcohol dehydrogenase; cofactor binding and release; interdomain cleft dynamics; molecular dynamics simulations; denatured state ensemble; protein coil library; peptides; intrinsically disordered proteins; ion-pairing interaction; side-chain length; charged amino acids; β-hairpin; peptide; Friedman’s test; backbone atom coordinate variances and uncertainties; superimposition; nanobody; protein structure; immunoglobulin domain; NMR; n/a