A Census of Human Methionine-Rich Prion-like Domain-Containing Proteins
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Abstract: Methionine-rich prion-like proteins can regulate liquid–liquid phase separation processes
in response to stresses. To date, however, very few proteins have been identified as methionine-rich
prion-like. Herein, we have performed a computational survey of the human proteome to search for
methionine-rich prion-like domains. We present a census of 51 manually curated methionine-rich
prion-like proteins. Our results show that these proteins tend to be modular in nature, with molecular
sizes significantly greater than those we would expect due to random sampling effects. These
proteins also exhibit a remarkably high degree of spatial compaction when compared to average
human proteins, even when protein size is accounted for. Computational evidence suggests that
such a high degree of compactness might be due to the aggregation of methionine residues, pointing
to a potential redox regulation of compactness. Gene ontology and network analyses, performed
to shed light on the biological processes in which these proteins might participate, indicate that
methionine-rich and non-methionine-rich prion-like proteins share gene ontology terms related to
the regulation of transcription and translation but, more interestingly, these analyses also reveal that
proteins from the methionine-rich group tend to share more gene ontology terms among them than
they do with their non-methionine-rich prion-like counterparts.
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Aledo, J.C. A Census of Human Methionine-Rich Prion-like Domain-Containing Proteins. Antioxidants 2022, 11, 1289. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox11071289










