Critical assessment of protein intrinsic disorder prediction

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2021
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American English
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Springer Nature
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Abstract

Intrinsically disordered proteins, defying the traditional protein structure–function paradigm, are a challenge to study experimentally. Because a large part of our knowledge rests on computational predictions, it is crucial that their accuracy is high. The Critical Assessment of protein Intrinsic Disorder prediction (CAID) experiment was established as a community-based blind test to determine the state of the art in prediction of intrinsically disordered regions and the subset of residues involved in binding. A total of 43 methods were evaluated on a dataset of 646 proteins from DisProt. The best methods use deep learning techniques and notably outperform physicochemical methods. The top disorder predictor has Fmax = 0.483 on the full dataset and Fmax = 0.792 following filtering out of bona fide structured regions. Disordered binding regions remain hard to predict, with Fmax = 0.231. Interestingly, computing times among methods can vary by up to four orders of magnitude.

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Necci M, Piovesan D; CAID Predictors; DisProt Curators, Tosatto SCE. Critical assessment of protein intrinsic disorder prediction. Nat Methods. 2021;18(5):472-481. doi:10.1038/s41592-021-01117-3
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Nature Methods
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PMC
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Article
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