scholarly journals Interspecific adaptation by binary choice at de novo polyomavirus T antigen site through accelerated codon-constrained Val-Ala toggling within an intrinsically disordered region

2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (10) ◽  
pp. 4800-4813 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Lauber ◽  
Siamaque Kazem ◽  
Alexander A. Kravchenko ◽  
Mariet C.W. Feltkamp ◽  
Alexander E. Gorbalenya
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyung-Goo Kim ◽  
Jill A. Rosenfeld ◽  
Daryl A. Scott ◽  
Gerard Bénédicte ◽  
Jonathan D. Labonne ◽  
...  

Abstract Background PHF21A has been associated with intellectual disability and craniofacial anomalies based on its deletion in the Potocki-Shaffer syndrome region at 11p11.2 and its disruption in three patients with balanced translocations. In addition, three patients with de novo truncating mutations in PHF21A were reported recently. Here, we analyze genomic data from seven unrelated individuals with mutations in PHF21A and provide detailed clinical descriptions, further expanding the phenotype associated with PHF21A haploinsufficiency. Methods Diagnostic trio whole exome sequencing, Sanger sequencing, use of GeneMatcher, targeted gene panel sequencing, and MiSeq sequencing techniques were used to identify and confirm variants. RT-qPCR was used to measure the normal expression pattern of PHF21A in multiple human tissues including 13 different brain tissues. Protein-DNA modeling was performed to substantiate the pathogenicity of the missense mutation. Results We have identified seven heterozygous coding mutations, among which six are de novo (not maternal in one). Mutations include four frameshifts, one nonsense mutation in two patients, and one heterozygous missense mutation in the AT Hook domain, predicted to be deleterious and likely to cause loss of PHF21A function. We also found a new C-terminal domain composed of an intrinsically disordered region. This domain is truncated in six patients and thus likely to play an important role in the function of PHF21A, suggesting that haploinsufficiency is the likely underlying mechanism in the phenotype of seven patients. Our results extend the phenotypic spectrum of PHF21A mutations by adding autism spectrum disorder, epilepsy, hypotonia, and neurobehavioral problems. Furthermore, PHF21A is highly expressed in the human fetal brain, which is consistent with the neurodevelopmental phenotype. Conclusion Deleterious nonsense, frameshift, and missense mutations disrupting the AT Hook domain and/or an intrinsically disordered region in PHF21A were found to be associated with autism spectrum disorder, epilepsy, hypotonia, neurobehavioral problems, tapering fingers, clinodactyly, and syndactyly, in addition to intellectual disability and craniofacial anomalies. This suggests that PHF21A is involved in autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability, and its haploinsufficiency causes a diverse neurological phenotype.


2016 ◽  
Vol 110 (3) ◽  
pp. 557a
Author(s):  
Zhengjian Zhang ◽  
Zarko Boskovic ◽  
Mahmud Hussain ◽  
Wenxin Hu ◽  
Carla Inouye ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duy Phuoc Tran ◽  
Akio Kitao

<p>We investigate association and dissociation mechanisms of a typical intrinsically disordered region (IDR), transcriptional activation subdomain of tumor repressor protein p53 (TAD-p53) with murine double-minute clone 2 protein (MDM2). Using the combination of cycles of association and dissociation parallel cascade molecular dynamics, multiple standard MD, and Markov state model, we are successful in obtaining the lowest free energy structure of MDM2/TAD-p53 complex as the structure very close to that in crystal without prior knowledge. This method also reproduces the experimentally measured standard binding free energy, and association and dissociation rate constants solely with the accumulated MD simulation cost of 11.675 μs, in spite of the fact that actual dissociation occurs in the order of a second. Although there exist a few complex intermediates with similar free energies, TAD-p53 first binds MDM2 as the second lowest free energy intermediate dominantly (> 90% in flux), taking a form similar to one of the intermediate structures in its monomeric state. The mechanism of this step has a feature of conformational selection. In the second step, dehydration of the interface, formation of π-π stackings of the side-chains, and main-chain relaxation/hydrogen bond formation to complete α-helix take place, showing features of induced fit. In addition, dehydration (dewetting) is a key process for the final relaxation around the complex interface. These results demonstrate a more fine-grained view of the IDR association/dissociation beyond classical views of protein conformational change upon binding.</p>


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-83
Author(s):  
Y Berko-Flint ◽  
S Karby ◽  
D Hassin ◽  
S Lavi

An in vitro system to study carcinogen-induced amplification in simian virus 40 (SV40)-transformed Chinese hamster (CO60) cells is described. SV40 amplification in this system resembled in many aspects the viral overreplication observed in drug-treated CO60 cells. Cytosolic extracts from N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine-treated cells supported de novo DNA synthesis in the presence of excess exogenous T antigen and the SV40-containing plasmid pSVK1. The pattern of viral replication in these extracts was unique, since only the 2.4-kilobase-pair region spanning the origin was overreplicated, whereas distal sequences were not replicated significantly. Extracts from control cells supported only marginal levels of replication. In HeLa extracts, complete SV40 DNA molecules were replicated efficiently. The overreplication of the origin region in CO60 cell extracts was bidirectional and symmetrical. A fraction of the newly synthesized DNA molecules underwent a second round of replication, yielding MboI-sensitive fragments representing the 2.4-kilobase-pair region around the origin. The mechanisms controlling the amplification of the viral origin region, the nature of the cellular factors induced in the carcinogen-treated cells, and their putative association with general drug-induced SOS-like responses are discussed.


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