6. Target-binding behavior of IDPs via pre-structured motifs
Do-Hyoung Kim and Kyou-Hoon Han
7. The role of dancing duplexes in biology and disease
Heather M. Forsythe and Elisar Barbar
8. Intrinsic disorder in protein kinase A anchoring proteins signaling complexes
Mateusz Dyla and Magnus Kjaergaard
9. Protein intrinsic disorder on a dynamic nucleosomal landscape
Sveinn Bjarnason, Sarah F. Ruidiaz, Jordan McIvor, Davide Mercadante and Pétur O. Heidarsson
10. Flexible spandrels of the global plant virome: Proteomic-wide evolutionary patterns of structural intrinsic protein disorder elucidate modulation at the functional virus-host interplay
Rachid Tahzima, Annelies Haegeman, Sébastien Massart and Eugénie Hébrard
Vladimir N. Uversky is a Professor at the Department of Molecular Medicine, University of South Florida, USA. He obtained B.S. and M.S. degrees in Physics from Leningrad State University in Russia in 1986, then completed Ph.D. and Doctor of Sciences (D.Sc.) degrees in Physics and Mathematics (field of study - Biophysics) at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (1991) and the Institute Experimental and Theoretical Biophysics of the Russian Academy of Sciences (1998), respectively. In 1998, he moved to the University of California Santa Cruz to study protein folding, misfolding, protein conformation diseases, and protein intrinsic disorder phenomena. In 2004, he was invited to join the Indiana University School of Medicine to primary work on intrinsically disordered proteins, and since 2010 has been on faculty at the University of South Florida. He has authored over 850 scientific publications and edited several books and book series on protein structure.