DocumentCode :
3454937
Title :
Mutation analysis of disease causing proteins
Author :
Mondai, A.M. ; Jianjun Hu
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Math. & Comput. Sci., Claflin Univ., Orangeburg, SC, USA
fYear :
2012
fDate :
4-7 Oct. 2012
Firstpage :
975
Lastpage :
977
Abstract :
Usually, a disease is caused by different types of mutation in proteins. These mutations could be any of or combination of missense/nonsense, splicing, regulatory, small deletions, small insertions, small indels, gross deletions, gross insertions/duplications, complex rearrangement, repeat variations, etc. In the present study, we explore the mutation pattern of nucleotide and amino acid in disease-causing proteins based on missense and nonsense mutations only. Some diseases are caused due to mislocalization of proteins to a location other than the target and this happens due to changes or mutation in targeting signals. In our study, we divided the disease causing proteins into two groups: Group-1 is composed of proteins that cause disease due to mislocalization and Group-2 is composed of proteins that cause disease without changing their localization. Proteins in Group-1 are called mislocalized proteins and those in Group-2 are called non-mislocalized proteins. Our results show that in both categories (mislocalized and non-mislocalized), 32% to 35% mutations happen to nucleotides C and G and 15% to 18% mutations happen to nucleotides A and T. This means that nucleotides C and G are more prone to be mutated by other nucleotides; nucleotides A and T are less prone to be mutated. In case of amino acid mutation, R is the most prone to be mutated by other amino acids in both mislocalized (15% of total mutation) and non-mislocalized (14% of total mutation) proteins. Our results also show that there is no correlation between hydrophobicity and number of mutation happen to an amino acid.
Keywords :
biochemistry; diseases; hydrophobicity; macromolecules; molecular biophysics; proteins; amino acid; complex rearrangement; disease causing proteins; gross deletions; gross insertions-duplications; hydrophobicity; missense-nonsense combination; mutation analysis; nucleotide; protein mislocalization; regulatory; repeat variations; small deletions; small indels; small insertions; splicing; Amino acids; Diseases; Educational institutions; Humans; Indexes; Machinery; Proteins; Mutation; amino acid mutation; disease causing proteins; mislocalized proteins; nucleotide mutation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Bioinformatics and Biomedicine Workshops (BIBMW), 2012 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Philadelphia, PA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2746-6
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2744-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/BIBMW.2012.6470289
Filename :
6470289
Link To Document :
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