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The Complex and Critical Role of Glycine 12 (G12) in Beta-Connexins of Human Skin

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22052615

关键词

connexin; skin disease; glycine; gap junction structure

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  1. National Institute of Health AREA [R15GM116089]

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Glycine is an amino acid with unique properties due to its single hydrogen atom side chain. Conserved glycines in proteins often indicate domains involving tight turns or bends. Substitutions at position 12 of certain connexins lead to alterations in function and have been linked to hereditary skin disorders.
Glycine is an amino acid with unique properties because its side chain is composed of a single hydrogen atom. It confers conformational flexibility to proteins and conserved glycines are often indicative of protein domains involving tight turns or bends. All six beta-type connexins expressed in human epidermis (Cx26, Cx30, Cx30.3, Cx31, Cx31.1 and Cx32) contain a glycine at position 12 (G12). G12 is located about halfway through the cytoplasmic amino terminus and substitutions alter connexin function in a variety of ways, in some cases altering protein interactions and leading to cell death. There is also evidence that alteration of G12 changes the structure of the amino terminus in connexin- and amino acid- specific ways. This review integrates structural, functional and physiological information about the role of G12 in connexins, focusing on beta-connexins expressed in human epidermis. The importance of G12 substitutions in these beta-connexins is revealed in two hereditary skin disorders, keratitis ichthyosis and erythrokeratodermia variabilis, both of which result from missense mutations affecting G12.

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