Abstract

Intrinsic disorder is more abundant in eukaryotic than prokaryotic proteins. Methods predicting intrinsic disorder are based on the amino acid sequence of a protein. Therefore, there must exist an underlying difference in the sequences between eukaryotic and prokaryotic proteins causing the (predicted) difference in intrinsic disorder. By comparing proteins, from complete eukaryotic and prokaryotic proteomes, we show that the difference in intrinsic disorder emerges from the linker regions connecting Pfam domains. Eukaryotic proteins have more extended linker regions, and in addition, the eukaryotic linkers are significantly more disordered, 38% vs. 12-16% disordered residues. Next, we examined the underlying reason for the increase in disorder in eukaryotic linkers, and we found that the changes in abundance of only three amino acids cause the increase. Eukaryotic proteins contain 8.6% serine; while prokaryotic proteins have 6.5%, eukaryotic proteins also contain 5.4% proline and 5.3% isoleucine compared with 4.0% proline and ≈ 7.5% isoleucine in the prokaryotes. All these three differences contribute to the increased disorder in eukaryotic proteins. It is tempting to speculate that the increase in serine frequencies in eukaryotes is related to regulation by kinases, but direct evidence for this is lacking. The differences are observed in all phyla, protein families, structural regions and type of protein but are most pronounced in disordered and linker regions. The observation that differences in the abundance of three amino acids cause the difference in disorder between eukaryotic and prokaryotic proteins raises the question: Are amino acid frequencies different in eukaryotic linkers because the linkers are more disordered or do the differences cause the increased disorder?

Highlights

  • Eukaryotic cells are more complex than prokaryotic cells, and have an increased need for regulation

  • We show that eukaryotic proteins contain more extended linker regions and that these linker regions are significantly more disordered

  • The most notable differences are that; (i) eukaryotic proteins are longer [2,3,4,5], (ii) multi-domain proteins are more abundant in eukaryotes [6,7,8], (iii) domain repeats are frequent in multicellular organisms [9], and (iv) eukaryotic proteins have a higher fraction of disordered residues [10]

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Summary

Introduction

Eukaryotic cells are more complex than prokaryotic cells, and have an increased need for regulation. They contain organelles, have more complex genes and a more advanced chaperonin system enabling the folding of longer proteins [1]. The increased number of domain repeats appears to be a unique feature of multicellular organisms [9]. These repeats have been proposed to provide eukaryotes with an additional source of variability to compensate for low generation rates [13] and are important for signalling

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