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Is the intrinsic disorder of proteins the cause of the scale‐free architecture of protein–protein interaction networks?
23
Citations
28
References
2007
Year
Protein DisorderInteraction NetworkMolecular BiologyNetwork AnalysisAnalytical UltracentrifugationProtein-protein InteractionScale-free NetworkProtein FoldingProtein–protein Interaction NetworksScale‐free ArchitectureBiological NetworkBiophysicsInteractomicsTopological RepresentationIntrinsic DisorderProtein ModelingNetwork TheoryNetwork ScienceGraph TheoryNatural SciencesNetwork MapsSystems BiologyMedicine
In protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks certain topological properties appear to be recurrent: network maps are considered scale-free. It is possible that this topology is reflected in the protein structure. In this paper, we investigate the role of protein disorder in the network topology. We find that the disorder of a protein (or of its neighbors) is independent of its number of PPIs. This result suggests that protein disorder does not play a role in the scale-free architecture of protein networks.
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