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Establishing Molecular Basis of Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome by Bioinformatics and Biophysics Approaches |
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Anton
Persikov, PhD
Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics
Princeton
University
Research Funded by
Ehlers-Danlos National Foundation
Glycine mutations in type III
collagen gene often lead to the Vascular Type of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. My
study showed that these substitutions result in destabilization of collagen
triple helix, which varies depending on the amino acid residue replacing for
glycine, as well as amino acid environment of the mutation site. The level of
this destabilization may determine whether mutation will or will not lead to
disease. In particular, when proline residue is found next to the mutated
glycine, the triple helix destabilization is more dramatic, leading more
frequently to pathological EDS phenotypes. The least destabilizing mutations,
when glycine is replaced by alanine, cysteine or serine, and these residues are
not followed by proline, lead to minimal destabilization of the collagen and
normal phenotypes. I will continue studying how mutations observed in EDS
affect collagen ability to bind other molecules in extracellular matrix.
Understanding of molecular basis for EDS together with modern machine learning
methods will allow prediction of phenotype from the knowledge of genotype. In
another words, from DNA analysis it will be possible to predict whether
alterations in collagen gene will or will not lead to disease.
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