4.7 Article

A Glance into MTHFR Deficiency at a Molecular Level

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010167

Keywords

MTHFR deficiency; MTHFR variants; functional annotation; structural annotation; disease related variations; solvent accessibility; AAG predictions; consensus method; protein-protein interactions; disease HMM models

Funding

  1. PRIN2017 grant from the Italian Ministry of University and Research [2017483NH8_002]

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This study investigates the association between MTHFR deficiency and protein structure variations. Using computational tools, the researchers explored the properties of 72 disease-associated missense variations in the MTHFR protein. They found that 61% of the variations destabilized the protein and corresponded to known deficiencies. The study also revealed unique patterns of disease-associated variations in the protein architecture of MTHFR.
MTHFR deficiency still deserves an investigation to associate the phenotype to protein structure variations. To this aim, considering the MTHFR wild type protein structure, with a catalytic and a regulatory domain and taking advantage of state-of-the-art computational tools, we explore the properties of 72 missense variations known to be disease associated. By computing the thermodynamic Delta Delta G change according to a consensus method that we recently introduced, we find that 61% of the disease-related variations destabilize the protein, are present both in the catalytic and regulatory domain and correspond to known biochemical deficiencies. The propensity of solvent accessible residues to be involved in protein-protein interaction sites indicates that most of the interacting residues are located in the regulatory domain, and that only three of them, located at the interface of the functional protein homodimer, are both disease-related and destabilizing. Finally, we compute the protein architecture with Hidden Markov Models, one from Pfam for the catalytic domain and the second computed in house for the regulatory domain. We show that patterns of disease-associated, physicochemical variation types, both in the catalytic and regulatory domains, are unique for the MTHFR deficiency when mapped into the protein architecture.

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