AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how pathogenic missense mutations are inherited, highlighting that recessive mutations occur in the buried regions of proteins while dominant mutations are more common at molecular interaction interfaces.
  • - Researchers explored three types of dominant mutations—haploinsufficiency, dominant-negative, and toxic gain-of-function—and how these affect macromolecular complex structures and interactions.
  • - Findings reveal that different dominant mutations are associated with distinct molecular interactions: dominant-negative mutations target protein or DNA interfaces, haploinsufficiency mutations focus on DNA interfaces, and gain-of-function mutations are found at domain-domain interfaces, aiding in understanding disease mechanisms based on mutation inheritance.

Article Abstract

The inheritance modes of pathogenic missense mutations are known to be highly associated with protein structures; recessive mutations are mainly observed in the buried region of protein structures, whereas dominant mutations are significantly enriched in the interfaces of molecular interactions. However, the differences in phenotypic impacts among various dominant mutations observed in individuals are not fully understood. In the present study, the functional effects of pathogenic missense mutations on three-dimensional macromolecular complex structures were explored in terms of dominant mutation types, namely, haploinsufficiency, dominant-negative, or toxic gain-of-function. The major types of dominant mutation were significantly associated with the different types of molecular interactions, such as protein-DNA, homo-oligomerization, or intramolecular domain-domain interactions, affected by mutations. The dominant-negative mutations were biased toward molecular interfaces for cognate protein or DNA. The haploinsufficiency mutations were enriched on the DNA interfaces. The gain-of-function mutations were localized to domain-domain interfaces. Our results demonstrate a novel use of macromolecular complex structures for predicting the disease-causing mechanisms through inheritance modes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5561164PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-08902-1DOI Listing

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