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CANDC
2006
ACM

Unraveling the nature of the segmentation clock: Intrinsic disorder of clock proteins and their interaction map

14 years 15 days ago
Unraveling the nature of the segmentation clock: Intrinsic disorder of clock proteins and their interaction map
Vertebrate segmentation has been proved to be under a strict temporal control governed by a biological clock, known as the segmentation clock. The present experimental evidence suggests that the segmentation clock initiates and maintains its periodic cycle by the periodic activation or inhibition of the Notch signaling pathway as well as the periodic autoregulation of the cyclic genes themselves. In this paper, we investigate the structural and evolutionary properties of the Notch pathway proteins involved in the mice segmentation clock and computationally identify the interaction map within the Notch signaling pathway. The results of our analysis strongly indicate that most of the pathway proteins are intrinsically disordered and that the mechanism of their interaction likely involves helical molecular recognition elements, short loosely structured segments within disordered regions which are directly involved in protein
Sourav Roy, Santiago Schnell, Predrag Radivojac
Added 11 Dec 2010
Updated 11 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2006
Where CANDC
Authors Sourav Roy, Santiago Schnell, Predrag Radivojac
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