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Gajinder Pal Singh

SUNY Upstate Medical University

ORCID: 0000-0002-3972-3324

Publishes on Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology, Malaria Research and Control, Biochemical and Molecular Research. 42 papers and 765 citations.

42Publications
765Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Role of intrinsic disorder in transient interactions of hub proteins
Gajinder Pal Singh, Mythily Ganapathi, Debasis Dash|Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics|2006
Cited by 159

Hubs in the protein-protein interaction network have been classified as "party" hubs, which are highly correlated in their mRNA expression with their partners while "date" hubs show lesser correlation. In this study, we explored the role of intrinsic disorder in date and party hub interactions. The data reveals that intrinsic disorder is significantly enriched in date hub proteins when compared with party hub proteins. Intrinsic disorder has been largely implicated in transient binding interactions. The disorder to order transition, which occurs during binding interactions in disordered regions, renders the interaction highly reversible while maintaining the high specificity. The enrichment of intrinsic disorder in date hubs may facilitate transient interactions, which might be required for date hubs to interact with different partners at different times.

Intrinsic unstructuredness and abundance of PEST motifs in eukaryotic proteomes
Gajinder Pal Singh, Mythily Ganapathi, Kuljeet Singh Sandhu et al.|Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics|2005
Cited by 104

The study of unfolded protein regions has gained importance because of their prevalence and important roles in various cellular functions. These regions have characteristically high net charge and low hydrophobicity. The amino acid sequence determines the intrinsic unstructuredness of a region and, therefore, efforts are ongoing to delineate the sequence motifs, which might contribute to protein disorder. We find that PEST motifs are enriched in the characterized disordered regions as compared with globular ones. Analysis of representative PDB chains revealed very few structures containing PEST sequences and the majority of them lacked regular secondary structure. A proteome-wide study in completely sequenced eukaryotes with predicted unfolded and folded proteins shows that PEST proteins make up a large fraction of unfolded dataset as compared with the folded proteins. Our data also reveal the prevalence of PEST proteins in eukaryotic proteomes (approximately 25%). Functional classification of the PEST-containing proteins shows an over- and under-representation in proteins involved in regulation and metabolism, respectively. Furthermore, our analysis shows that predicted PEST regions do not exhibit any preference to be localized in the C terminals of proteins, as reported earlier.

Global Transcriptome and Mutagenic Analyses of the Acid Tolerance Response of Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium
Daniel Ryan, Niladri Bhusan Pati, Urmesh K. Ojha et al.|Applied and Environmental Microbiology|2015
Cited by 73Open Access

Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) is one of the leading causative agents of food-borne bacterial gastroenteritis. Swift invasion through the intestinal tract and successful establishment in systemic organs are associated with the adaptability of S. Typhimurium to different stress environments. Low-pH stress serves as one of the first lines of defense in mammalian hosts, which S. Typhimurium must efficiently overcome to establish an infection. Therefore, a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the adaptability of S. Typhimurium to acid stress is highly relevant. In this study, we have performed a transcriptome analysis of S. Typhimurium under the acid tolerance response (ATR) and found a large number of genes (∼47%) to be differentially expressed (more than 1.5-fold or less than -1.5-fold; P < 0.01). Functional annotation revealed differentially expressed genes to be associated with regulation, metabolism, transport and binding, pathogenesis, and motility. Additionally, our knockout analysis of a subset of differentially regulated genes facilitated the identification of proteins that contribute to S. Typhimurium ATR and virulence. Mutants lacking genes encoding the K(+) binding and transport protein KdpA, hypothetical protein YciG, the flagellar hook cap protein FlgD, and the nitrate reductase subunit NarZ were significantly deficient in their ATRs and displayed varied in vitro virulence characteristics. This study offers greater insight into the transcriptome changes of S. Typhimurium under the ATR and provides a framework for further research on the subject.

Intrinsic disorder in yeast transcriptional regulatory network
Gajinder Pal Singh, Debasis Dash|Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics|2007
Cited by 68

Intrinsic disorder has been shown to be important in mediating protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions. Proteins involved in regulatory functions are particularly enriched in intrinsic disorder. In this study we explored the role of intrinsic disorder in transcriptional regulatory network of yeast. Using disorder prediction programs we show that transcription factors (TFs) regulating large number of targets (transcriptional hubs) have significantly increased intrinsic disorder, though targets regulated by multiple TFs did not show increased intrinsic disorder. Intrinsic disorder may allow these transcriptional hubs to bind to diverse promoter regions of their targets in different contexts, and may also allow complex regulatory control of transcriptional hubs that are involved in coordinating different cellular processes.