4.6 Article

Ankyrin repeats in context with human population variation

Journal

PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1009335

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) [BB/J019364/1, BB/R014752/1]
  2. BBSRC EASTBIO Ph.D. Studentship [BB/J01446X/1]
  3. Wellcome Trust Ph.D. studentship [102132/B/13/Z]
  4. Wellcome Trust Biomedical Resources Grant [101651/Z/13/Z]
  5. Wellcome Trust [101651/Z/13/Z, 102132/B/13/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust
  6. BBSRC [BB/J019364/1, BB/R014752/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The study combines genetic differences between over 100,000 individuals and in-depth analysis of Ankyrin repeats to identify critical sites for ankyrin stability and substrate interactions. Highly conserved positions with low missense variants in the human population were found, while evolutionarily divergent positions were enriched in protein-protein interactions. The research suggests the domain has three surfaces with different enrichment patterns in interactions and variants.
Author summary Comparison of variation at each position of the amino acid sequence for a protein across different species is a powerful way to identify parts of the protein that are important for its structure and function. Large-scale DNA sequencing of healthy people has recently made it possible to study normal genetic variation within just one species. Our work combines information on genetic differences between over 100,000 people with in-depth analysis of all available three-dimensional structures for Ankyrin repeats, which are a widespread family of binding proteins formed by units with similar amino acid sequence that are found in tandem. Our combined analysis identifies sites critical for ankyrin stability as well as the positions most important for substrate interactions and hence function. Although focused only on the Ankyrins, the principles developed in our work are general and can be applied to any protein family. Ankyrin protein repeats bind to a wide range of substrates and are one of the most common protein motifs in nature. Here, we collate a high-quality alignment of 7,407 ankyrin repeats and examine for the first time, the distribution of human population variants from large-scale sequencing of healthy individuals across this family. Population variants are not randomly distributed across the genome but are constrained by gene essentiality and function. Accordingly, we interpret the population variants in context with evolutionary constraint and structural features including secondary structure, accessibility and protein-protein interactions across 383 three-dimensional structures of ankyrin repeats. We find five positions that are highly conserved across homologues and also depleted in missense variants within the human population. These positions are significantly enriched in intra-domain contacts and so likely to be key for repeat packing. In contrast, a group of evolutionarily divergent positions are found to be depleted in missense variants in human but significantly enriched in protein-protein interactions. Our analysis also suggests the domain has three, not two surfaces, each with different patterns of enrichment in protein-substrate interactions and missense variants. Our findings will be of interest to those studying or engineering ankyrin-repeat containing proteins as well as those interpreting the significance of disease variants.

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