Understanding pathogenic single-nucleotide polymorphisms in multidomain proteins - Studies of isolated domains are not enough

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Abstract

Studying the effects of pathogenic mutations is more complex in multidomain proteins when compared with single domains: mutations occurring at domain boundaries may have a large effect on a neighbouring domain that will not be detected in a single-domain system. To demonstrate this, we present a study that utilizes well-characterized model protein domains from human spectrin to investigate the effect of disease- and non-disease-causing single point mutations occurring at the boundaries of human spectrin repeats. Our results show that mutations in the single domains have no clear correlation with stability and disease; however, when studied in a tandem model system, the disease-causing mutations are shown to disrupt stabilizing interactions that exist between domains. This results in a much larger decrease in stability than would otherwise have been predicted, and demonstrates the importance of studying such mutations in the correct protein context. © 2012 The Authors Journal compilation © 2012 FEBS.

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Randles, L. G., Dawes, G. J. S., Wensley, B. G., Steward, A., Nickson, A. A., & Clarke, J. (2013). Understanding pathogenic single-nucleotide polymorphisms in multidomain proteins - Studies of isolated domains are not enough. FEBS Journal, 280(4), 1018–1027. https://doi.org/10.1111/febs.12094

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