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Characterization of pathogenic germline mutations in human Protein Kinases

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Title: Characterization of pathogenic germline mutations in human Protein Kinases
Authors: Izarzugaza, JMG
Hopcroft, LEM
Baresic, A
Orengo, CA
Martin, ACR
Valencia, A
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: Background: Protein Kinases are a superfamily of proteins involved in crucial cellular processes such as cell cycle regulation and signal transduction. Accordingly, they play an important role in cancer biology. To contribute to the study of the relation between kinases and disease we compared pathogenic mutations to neutral mutations as an extension to our previous analysis of cancer somatic mutations. First, we analyzed native and mutant proteins in terms of amino acid composition. Secondly, mutations were characterized according to their potential structural effects and finally, we assessed the location of the different classes of polymorphisms with respect to kinase-relevant positions in terms of subfamily specificity, conservation, accessibility and functional sites.Results: Pathogenic Protein Kinase mutations perturb essential aspects of protein function, including disruption of substrate binding and/or effector recognition at family-specific positions. Interestingly these mutations in Protein Kinases display a tendency to avoid structurally relevant positions, what represents a significant difference with respect to the average distribution of pathogenic mutations in other protein families.Conclusions: Disease-associated mutations display sound differences with respect to neutral mutations: several amino acids are specific of each mutation type, different structural properties characterize each class and the distribution of pathogenic mutations within the consensus structure of the Protein Kinase domain is substantially different to that for non-pathogenic mutations. This preferential distribution confirms previous observations about the functional and structural distribution of the controversial cancer driver and passenger somatic mutations and their use as a proxy for the study of the involvement of somatic mutations in cancer development. © 2011 Izarzugaza et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Issue Date: 5-Jul-2011
Date of Acceptance: 5-Jul-2011
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/28011
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-12-S4-S1
ISSN: 1471-2105
Publisher: BioMed Central
Journal / Book Title: BMC Bioinformatics
Volume: 12
Issue: SUPPL. 4
Copyright Statement: © 2011 Izarzugaza et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Publication Status: Published
Article Number: S1
Appears in Collections:Institute of Clinical Sciences