Physicochemical mechanisms of protein regulation by phosphorylation

Phosphorylation offers a dynamic way to regulate protein activity and subcellular localization, which is achieved through reversibility and fast kinetics of posttranslational modifications. Adding or removing a dianionic phosphate group somewhere on a protein often changes the protein’s structural p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hafumi eNishi, Alexey eShaytan, Anna R. Panchenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
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Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2014.00270/full
Description
Summary:Phosphorylation offers a dynamic way to regulate protein activity and subcellular localization, which is achieved through reversibility and fast kinetics of posttranslational modifications. Adding or removing a dianionic phosphate group somewhere on a protein often changes the protein’s structural properties, its stability and dynamics. Moreover, the majority of signaling pathways involve an extensive set of protein-protein interactions, and phosphorylation can be used to regulate and modulate protein-protein binding. Losses of phosphorylation sites, as a result of disease mutations, might disrupt protein binding and deregulate signal transduction. In this paper we focus on the effects of phosphorylation on protein stability, dynamics and binding. We describe several physico-chemical mechanisms of protein regulation through phosphorylation and pay particular attention to phosphorylation in protein complexes and phosphorylation in the context of disorder-order and order-disorder transitions. Finally we assess the role of multiple phosphorylation sites in a protein molecule, their possible cooperativity and function.
ISSN:1664-8021