Hello, the question I wanted to ask is : are protein domains considered ordered proteins?
I understand protein domains to be regions of protein sequence/structure which can fold independently from the rest of the protein and have their own functionality. What I don't understand is how exactly this relates to the concept of order/disorder. I've run a disorder predictor on a SCOP domain and found strong likelihoods of disordered regions however from my understanding this shouldn't have been possible as SCOP domains are proteins whose structure 'should be' solved and annotated. Wouldn't the presence of disorder contradict the relevance of classifying a protein by fold/superfamily/family?
Thank you.
Thank you for the response! It makes sense that domains can of course be considered disordered and thus be used in classification strategies based maybe on function. I just thought that such domains would be left out of the SCOPe database as this database should be protein domains whose structures have 'largely' been determined and thus classified with other domains at the various levels. This implied to me that the protein domains in SCOPe are ordered however I now know that not to be the case.