We are excited to announce the latest release of DisProt, featuring new curated annotations,
continuous improvements to our curation workflow, and a new thematic dataset on stress-related
proteins, highlighting the role of intrinsic disorder in cellular stress responses.

Learn more about the new dataset and explore the disorder states and functions of these proteins
in our latest blog post: https://biocomputingup.github.io/2026/07/01/new-stress-response-proteins/
Celebrating the contributors behind this release
We would especially like to acknowledge Ximena Castro for her outstanding contribution to the
thematic dataset, together with Rita Pancsa, Erzsébet Fichó, Jaime Santos Suárez, Bernadett
Juhász, and Gabriel Alejandro Rivas.
We are also grateful to our technical team, Adel Bourahoua and Amirali Motaghedy, for their continuous efforts in improving DisProt and developing new features that enhance the experience of both our users and curators
New community resources
This release also marks the launch of two new resources designed to support and engage the DisProt community:
- The official DisProt YouTube channel, where you can find tutorials, training videos, and
educational content about DisProt, intrinsically disordered proteins, and biocuration. Subscribe to
stay up to date with future content! - The DisProt Zenodo Community, a central hub for training materials, presentations, posters,
protocols, and other DisProt-related resources. If you would like to become a member and
contribute your work, contact us at info@disprot.org.
We look forward to growing these initiatives together with our community and continuing to advance the study of intrinsically disordered proteins through open, collaborative science.
The DisProt team
Maria Cristina Aspromonte and Maria Victoria Nugnes

