4.7 Article

Conformational Dynamics and Allosteric Regulation Landscapes of Germline PTEN Mutations Associated with Autism Compared to Those Associated with Cancer

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 104, Issue 5, Pages 861-878

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.03.009

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [P01CA124570]
  2. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) [U54NS092090]
  3. Ambrose Monell Foundation PTEN-Switch Grant
  4. Ohio Supercomputing Center [PCCF0020]
  5. Ambrose Monell Cancer Genomic Medicine Fellowship
  6. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [T32 5T32CA59366-22]

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Individuals with germline PTEN tumor-suppressor variants have PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome (PHTS). Clinically, PHTS has variable presentations; there are distinct subsets of PHTS-affected individuals, such as those diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or cancer. It remains unclear why mutations in one gene can lead to such seemingly disparate phenotypes. Therefore, we sought to determine whether it is possible to predict a given PHTS-affected individual's a priori risk of ASD, cancer, or the co-occurrence of both phenotypes. By integrating network proximity analysis performed on the human interactome, molecular simulations, and residue-interaction networks, we demonstrate the role of conformational dynamics in the structural communication and long-range allosteric regulation of germline PTEN variants associated with ASD or cancer. We show that the PTEN interactome shares significant overlap with the ASD and cancer interactomes, providing network-based evidence that PTEN is a crucial player in the biology of both disorders. Importantly, this finding suggests that a germline PTEN variant might perturb the ASD or cancer networks differently, thus favoring one disease outcome at any one time. Furthermore, protein-dynamic structural-network analysis reveals small-world structural communication mediated by highly conserved functional residues and potential allosteric regulation of PTEN. We identified a salient structural-communication pathway that extends across the inter-domain interface for cancer-only mutations. In contrast, the structural-communication pathway is predominantly restricted to the phosphatase domain for ASD-only mutations. Our integrative approach supports the prediction and potential modulation of the relevant conformational states that influence structural communication and long-range perturbations associated with mutational effects that lead to PTEN-ASD or PTEN-cancer phenotypes.

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