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Structural and functional restraints on the occurrence of single amino acid variations in human proteins.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Gong, Sungsam 
Blundell, Tom L 

Abstract

Human genetic variation is the incarnation of diverse evolutionary history, which reflects both selectively advantageous and selectively neutral change. In this study, we catalogue structural and functional features of proteins that restrain genetic variation leading to single amino acid substitutions. Our variation dataset is divided into three categories: i) Mendelian disease-related variants, ii) neutral polymorphisms and iii) cancer somatic mutations. We characterize structural environments of the amino acid variants by the following properties: i) side-chain solvent accessibility, ii) main-chain secondary structure, and iii) hydrogen bonds from a side chain to a main chain or other side chains. To address functional restraints, amino acid substitutions in proteins are examined to see whether they are located at functionally important sites involved in protein-protein interactions, protein-ligand interactions or catalytic activity of enzymes. We also measure the likelihood of amino acid substitutions and the degree of residue conservation where variants occur. We show that various types of variants are under different degrees of structural and functional restraints, which affect their occurrence in human proteome.

Description

Keywords

Amino Acid Substitution, Binding Sites, Databases, Protein, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Variation, Humans, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Molecular, Mutation, Polymorphism, Genetic, Protein Binding, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Proteins, Structure-Activity Relationship

Journal Title

PLoS One

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1932-6203
1932-6203

Volume Title

5

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)