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1.
Biochemistry ; 63(11): 1423-1433, 2024 Jun 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38743592

ABSTRACT

PGM1-linked congenital disorder of glycosylation (PGM1-CDG) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by several phenotypes, some of which are life-threatening. Research focusing on the disease-related variants of the α-D-phosphoglucomutase 1 (PGM1) protein has shown that several are insoluble in vitro and expressed at low levels in patient fibroblasts. Due to these observations, we hypothesized that some disease-linked PGM1 protein variants are structurally destabilized and subject to protein quality control (PQC) and rapid intracellular degradation. Employing yeast-based assays, we show that a disease-associated human variant, PGM1 L516P, is insoluble, inactive, and highly susceptible to ubiquitylation and rapid degradation by the proteasome. In addition, we show that PGM1 L516P forms aggregates in S. cerevisiae and that both the aggregation pattern and the abundance of PGM1 L516P are chaperone-dependent. Finally, using computational methods, we perform saturation mutagenesis to assess the impact of all possible single residue substitutions in the PGM1 protein. These analyses identify numerous missense variants with predicted detrimental effects on protein function and stability. We suggest that many disease-linked PGM1 variants are subject to PQC-linked degradation and that our in silico site-saturated data set may assist in the mechanistic interpretation of PGM1 variants.


Subject(s)
Phosphoglucomutase , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Humans , Phosphoglucomutase/metabolism , Phosphoglucomutase/genetics , Phosphoglucomutase/chemistry , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Proteolysis , Mutation, Missense , Ubiquitination , Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation/genetics , Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation/metabolism , Protein Stability , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/genetics
2.
Nature ; 626(8000): 897-904, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38297118

ABSTRACT

Intrinsically disordered proteins and regions (collectively, IDRs) are pervasive across proteomes in all kingdoms of life, help to shape biological functions and are involved in numerous diseases. IDRs populate a diverse set of transiently formed structures and defy conventional sequence-structure-function relationships1. Developments in protein science have made it possible to predict the three-dimensional structures of folded proteins at the proteome scale2. By contrast, there is a lack of knowledge about the conformational properties of IDRs, partly because the sequences of disordered proteins are poorly conserved and also because only a few of these proteins have been characterized experimentally. The inability to predict structural properties of IDRs across the proteome has limited our understanding of the functional roles of IDRs and how evolution shapes them. As a supplement to previous structural studies of individual IDRs3, we developed an efficient molecular model to generate conformational ensembles of IDRs and thereby to predict their conformational properties from sequences4,5. Here we use this model to simulate nearly all of the IDRs in the human proteome. Examining conformational ensembles of 28,058 IDRs, we show how chain compaction is correlated with cellular function and localization. We provide insights into how sequence features relate to chain compaction and, using a machine-learning model trained on our simulation data, show the conservation of conformational properties across orthologues. Our results recapitulate observations from previous studies of individual protein systems and exemplify how to link-at the proteome scale-conformational ensembles with cellular function and localization, amino acid sequence, evolutionary conservation and disease variants. Our freely available database of conformational properties will encourage further experimental investigation and enable the generation of hypotheses about the biological roles and evolution of IDRs.


Subject(s)
Intrinsically Disordered Proteins , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Proteome , Humans , Amino Acid Sequence , Intrinsically Disordered Proteins/chemistry , Intrinsically Disordered Proteins/genetics , Intrinsically Disordered Proteins/metabolism , Proteome/chemistry , Proteome/metabolism , Structure-Activity Relationship , Evolution, Molecular , Disease/genetics
3.
Elife ; 122023 05 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37184062

ABSTRACT

Predicting the thermodynamic stability of proteins is a common and widely used step in protein engineering, and when elucidating the molecular mechanisms behind evolution and disease. Here, we present RaSP, a method for making rapid and accurate predictions of changes in protein stability by leveraging deep learning representations. RaSP performs on-par with biophysics-based methods and enables saturation mutagenesis stability predictions in less than a second per residue. We use RaSP to calculate ∼ 230 million stability changes for nearly all single amino acid changes in the human proteome, and examine variants observed in the human population. We find that variants that are common in the population are substantially depleted for severe destabilization, and that there are substantial differences between benign and pathogenic variants, highlighting the role of protein stability in genetic diseases. RaSP is freely available-including via a Web interface-and enables large-scale analyses of stability in experimental and predicted protein structures.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Humans , Proteins/metabolism , Mutagenesis , Amino Acids/genetics , Protein Stability , Computational Biology/methods
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