3.8 Article

Computational study of the impact of nucleotide variations on highly conserved proteins: In the case of actin

Journal

BIOPHYSICS AND PHYSICOBIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOPHYSICAL SOC JAPAN
DOI: 10.2142/biophysico.bppb-v19.0025

Keywords

conservation; pathogenic variation; protein-protein interaction; protein three-dimensional structure; VUS

Categories

Funding

  1. Basis for Supporting Innovative Drug Discovery and Life Science Research (BINDS) [JP21am0101065]
  2. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
  3. Center for Interdisciplinary AI and Data Science at Ochanomizu University

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Sequencing individual human genomes allows for studying the relationship between nucleotide variations, amino acid substitutions, their effects on protein structures and diseases. This study focuses on actin, a highly conserved protein, and finds that variations on the surface of the protein tend to be pathogenic, while variations buried inside the protein are more benign.
Sequencing of individual human genomes enables studying relationship among nucleotide variations, amino acid substitutions, effect on protein structures and diseases. Many studies have found general tendencies, for instance, that pathogenic variations tend to be found in the buried regions of the protein structures, that benign variations tend to be found on the surface of the proteins, and that variations on evolutionary conserved residues tend to be pathogenic. These tendencies were deduced from globular proteins with standard evolutionary changes in amino acid sequences. In this study, we investigated the variation distribution on actin, one of the highly conserved proteins. Many nucleotide variations and three-dimensional structures of actin have been registered in databases. By combining those data, we found that variations buried inside the protein were rather benign and variations on the surface of the protein were pathogenic. This idiosyncratic distribution of the variation impact is likely ascribed to the extensive use of the surface of the protein for protein-protein interactions in actin.

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