Abstract
Aberrant glycosylation by N-acetylgalactosaminyl transferases (GALNTs) is a well-described pathological alteration that is widespread in hereditary diseases, prominently including human cancers, familial tumoral calcinosis and hyperostosis-hyperphosphatemia. In this study, we integrated different computational tools to perform the in silico analysis of clinically significant mutations (nsSNPs/single amino acid change) at both functional and structural levels, found in human GALNT3, GALNT8, GALNT12, and GALNT13 genes. From function and structure based insights, mutations encoding R162Q, T359K, C574G, G359D, R297W, D303N, Y396C, and D313N substitutions were concordantly predicted highly deleterious for relevant GALNTs proteins. From intriguing findings, T359K-GALNT3 was simulated with high contribution for disease susceptibility (tumor calcinosis) as compared to its partner variant T272K (Ichikawa et al. [2006] J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 91:4472-4475). Similarly, the prediction of high damaging behavior, evolutionary conservation and structural destabilization for C574G were proposed as major contributing factors to regulate metabolic disorder underlying tumor calcinosis and hyperostosis-hyperphosphatemia syndrome. In case of R297W-GALNT12, prediction of highly deleterious effect and disruption in ionic interactions were anticipated with reduction in enzymatic activity, associated with bilateral breast cancer and primary colorectal cancers. The second GALNT12 mutation (D303N) - known splice variant - was predicted with disease severity as a result of decrease in charge density and buried behavior neighboring the catalytic B domain. In the lack of adequate in silico data about systematic characterization of clinically significant mutations in GALNTs genes, current study can be used as a significant tool to interpret the role of GALNTs reaction chemistry in disease-association risks in body. (copyright) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Author supplied keywords
- amino acid sequence
- amino acid substitution
- article
- asparagine
- binding site
- breast cancer
- breast carcinoma
- cancer susceptibility
- colon cancer
- colon carcinoma
- colorectal cancer
- computer model
- cysteine
- disease predisposition
- disease severity
- enzyme activity
- genetic conservation
- glutamic acid
- glycine
- glycosylation
- human
- hyperostosis
- hyperostosis hyperphosphatemia syndrome
- hyperphosphatemia
- intraductal carcinoma
- lectin
- leucine
- lysine
- metabolic disorder
- missense mutation
- molecular docking
- mucin 1
- mucin 5B
- mucin 7
- n acetylgalactosaminyltransferase
- n acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 12
- n acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 13
- n acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 3
- n acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 8
- phenotype
- phylogenetic tree
- prediction
- priority journal
- protein assembly
- protein function
- protein interaction
- protein ligand interaction
- protein protein interaction
- protein secondary structure
- protein stability
- protein structure
- reaction analysis
- sequence alignment
- sequence homology
- signal peptide
- support vector machine
- tumor calcinosis
- unclassified drug
- valine
Cite
CITATION STYLE
M.R.M., H., J., N., & J.Y., A.-A. (2014). Clinically significant missense variants in human GALNT3, GALNT8, GALNT12, and GALNT13 genes: Intriguing in silico findings. Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 115(2), 313–327. Retrieved from http://www.embase.com/search/results?subaction=viewrecord&from=export&id=L370503094
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