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1.
Blood ; 143(11): 1032-1044, 2024 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38096369

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Extreme disease phenotypes can provide key insights into the pathophysiology of common conditions, but studying such cases is challenging due to their rarity and the limited statistical power of existing methods. Herein, we used a novel approach to pathway-based mutational burden testing, the rare variant trend test (RVTT), to investigate genetic risk factors for an extreme form of sepsis-induced coagulopathy, infectious purpura fulminans (PF). In addition to prospective patient sample collection, we electronically screened over 10.4 million medical records from 4 large hospital systems and identified historical cases of PF for which archived specimens were available to perform germline whole-exome sequencing. We found a significantly increased burden of low-frequency, putatively function-altering variants in the complement system in patients with PF compared with unselected patients with sepsis (P = .01). A multivariable logistic regression analysis found that the number of complement system variants per patient was independently associated with PF after controlling for age, sex, and disease acuity (P = .01). Functional characterization of PF-associated variants in the immunomodulatory complement receptors CR3 and CR4 revealed that they result in partial or complete loss of anti-inflammatory CR3 function and/or gain of proinflammatory CR4 function. Taken together, these findings suggest that inherited defects in CR3 and CR4 predispose to the maladaptive hyperinflammation that characterizes severe sepsis with coagulopathy.


Subject(s)
Purpura Fulminans , Sepsis , Humans , Purpura Fulminans/genetics , Prospective Studies , Receptors, Complement
2.
Nat Genet ; 52(11): 1145-1150, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33046855

ABSTRACT

The influence of genetic background on driver mutations is well established; however, the mechanisms by which the background interacts with Mendelian loci remain unclear. We performed a systematic secondary-variant burden analysis of two independent cohorts of patients with Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) with known recessive biallelic pathogenic mutations in one of 17 BBS genes for each individual. We observed a significant enrichment of trans-acting rare nonsynonymous secondary variants in patients with BBS compared with either population controls or a cohort of individuals with a non-BBS diagnosis and recessive variants in the same gene set. Strikingly, we found a significant over-representation of secondary alleles in chaperonin-encoding genes-a finding corroborated by the observation of epistatic interactions involving this complex in vivo. These data indicate a complex genetic architecture for BBS that informs the biological properties of disease modules and presents a model for secondary-variant burden analysis in recessive disorders.


Subject(s)
Bardet-Biedl Syndrome/genetics , Genetic Variation , Alleles , Cohort Studies , Exome , Humans
3.
NPJ Genom Med ; 3: 21, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30131872

ABSTRACT

Despite major progress in defining the genetic basis of Mendelian disorders, the molecular etiology of many cases remains unknown. Patients with these undiagnosed disorders often have complex presentations and require treatment by multiple health care specialists. Here, we describe an integrated clinical diagnostic and research program using whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing (WES/WGS) for Mendelian disease gene discovery. This program employs specific case ascertainment parameters, a WES/WGS computational analysis pipeline that is optimized for Mendelian disease gene discovery with variant callers tuned to specific inheritance modes, an interdisciplinary crowdsourcing strategy for genomic sequence analysis, matchmaking for additional cases, and integration of the findings regarding gene causality with the clinical management plan. The interdisciplinary gene discovery team includes clinical, computational, and experimental biomedical specialists who interact to identify the genetic etiology of the disease, and when so warranted, to devise improved or novel treatments for affected patients. This program effectively integrates the clinical and research missions of an academic medical center and affords both diagnostic and therapeutic options for patients suffering from genetic disease. It may therefore be germane to other academic medical institutions engaged in implementing genomic medicine programs.

4.
Open Biol ; 6(4): 160009, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27248802

ABSTRACT

Multicellular eukaryotes have evolved a range of mechanisms for immune recognition. A widespread family involved in innate immunity are the NACHT-domain and leucine-rich-repeat-containing (NLR) proteins. Mammals have small numbers of NLR proteins, whereas in some species, mostly those without adaptive immune systems, NLRs have expanded into very large families. We describe a family of nearly 400 NLR proteins encoded in the zebrafish genome. The proteins share a defining overall structure, which arose in fishes after a fusion of the core NLR domains with a B30.2 domain, but can be subdivided into four groups based on their NACHT domains. Gene conversion acting differentially on the NACHT and B30.2 domains has shaped the family and created the groups. Evidence of positive selection in the B30.2 domain indicates that this domain rather than the leucine-rich repeats acts as the pathogen recognition module. In an unusual chromosomal organization, the majority of the genes are located on one chromosome arm, interspersed with other large multigene families, including a new family encoding zinc-finger proteins. The NLR-B30.2 proteins represent a new family with diversity in the specific recognition module that is present in fishes in spite of the parallel existence of an adaptive immune system.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , NLR Proteins/chemistry , NLR Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/chemistry , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Conserved Sequence , Genome , Multigene Family , Protein Domains , Time Factors , Zebrafish/genetics
5.
Nature ; 533(7603): 397-401, 2016 05 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27193686

ABSTRACT

Fitness landscapes depict how genotypes manifest at the phenotypic level and form the basis of our understanding of many areas of biology, yet their properties remain elusive. Previous studies have analysed specific genes, often using their function as a proxy for fitness, experimentally assessing the effect on function of single mutations and their combinations in a specific sequence or in different sequences. However, systematic high-throughput studies of the local fitness landscape of an entire protein have not yet been reported. Here we visualize an extensive region of the local fitness landscape of the green fluorescent protein from Aequorea victoria (avGFP) by measuring the native function (fluorescence) of tens of thousands of derivative genotypes of avGFP. We show that the fitness landscape of avGFP is narrow, with 3/4 of the derivatives with a single mutation showing reduced fluorescence and half of the derivatives with four mutations being completely non-fluorescent. The narrowness is enhanced by epistasis, which was detected in up to 30% of genotypes with multiple mutations and mostly occurred through the cumulative effect of slightly deleterious mutations causing a threshold-like decrease in protein stability and a concomitant loss of fluorescence. A model of orthologous sequence divergence spanning hundreds of millions of years predicted the extent of epistasis in our data, indicating congruence between the fitness landscape properties at the local and global scales. The characterization of the local fitness landscape of avGFP has important implications for several fields including molecular evolution, population genetics and protein design.


Subject(s)
Genetic Fitness , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Epistasis, Genetic , Evolution, Molecular , Fluorescence , Genetic Association Studies , Genotype , Hydrozoa/chemistry , Hydrozoa/genetics , Mutant Proteins/genetics , Mutant Proteins/metabolism , Mutation/genetics , Phenotype
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(30): 9328-33, 2015 Jul 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26170332

ABSTRACT

Proteases play important roles in many biologic processes and are key mediators of cancer, inflammation, and thrombosis. However, comprehensive and quantitative techniques to define the substrate specificity profile of proteases are lacking. The metalloprotease ADAMTS13 regulates blood coagulation by cleaving von Willebrand factor (VWF), reducing its procoagulant activity. A mutagenized substrate phage display library based on a 73-amino acid fragment of VWF was constructed, and the ADAMTS13-dependent change in library complexity was evaluated over reaction time points, using high-throughput sequencing. Reaction rate constants (kcat/KM) were calculated for nearly every possible single amino acid substitution within this fragment. This massively parallel enzyme kinetics analysis detailed the specificity of ADAMTS13 and demonstrated the critical importance of the P1-P1' substrate residues while defining exosite binding domains. These data provided empirical evidence for the propensity for epistasis within VWF and showed strong correlation to conservation across orthologs, highlighting evolutionary selective pressures for VWF.


Subject(s)
ADAM Proteins/chemistry , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , ADAMTS13 Protein , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites/genetics , Blood Coagulation , Cloning, Molecular , Epistasis, Genetic , Humans , Kinetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis , Mutation , Peptide Library , Protein Binding/genetics , Proteolysis , Substrate Specificity , von Willebrand Factor/chemistry
7.
Genome Biol Evol ; 4(12): 1213-22, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23132897

ABSTRACT

Whether or not evolutionary change is inherently irreversible remains a controversial topic. Some examples of evolutionary irreversibility are known; however, this question has not been comprehensively addressed at the molecular level. Here, we use data from 221 human genes with known pathogenic mutations to estimate the rate of irreversibility in protein evolution. For these genes, we reconstruct ancestral amino acid sequences along the mammalian phylogeny and identify ancestral amino acid states that match known pathogenic mutations. Such cases represent inherent evolutionary irreversibility because, at the present moment, reversals to these ancestral amino acid states are impossible for the human lineage. We estimate that approximately 10% of all amino acid substitutions along the mammalian phylogeny are irreversible, such that a return to the ancestral amino acid state would lead to a pathogenic phenotype. For a subset of 51 genes with high rates of irreversibility, as much as 40% of all amino acid evolution was estimated to be irreversible. Because pathogenic phenotypes do not resemble ancestral phenotypes, the molecular nature of the high rate of irreversibility in proteins is best explained by evolution with a high prevalence of compensatory, epistatic interactions between amino acid sites. Under such mode of protein evolution, once an amino acid substitution is fixed, the probability of its reversal declines as the protein sequence accumulates changes that affect the phenotypic manifestation of the ancestral state. The prevalence of epistasis in evolution indicates that the observed high rate of irreversibility in protein evolution is an inherent property of protein structure and function.


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Substitution , Evolution, Molecular , Genome, Human , Mutation Rate , Epistasis, Genetic , Humans , Mutation , Phenotype , Phylogeny
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