| Literature DB >> 16887038 |
Tiange Lang1, Gunnar C Hansson, Tore Samuelsson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mucins are large glycoproteins that cover epithelial surfaces of the body. All mucins contain at least one PTS domain, a region rich in proline, threonine and serine. Mucins are also characterized by von Willebrand D (VWD) domains or SEA domains. We have developed computational methods to identify mucin genes and proteins based on these properties of the proteins. Using such methods we are able to characterize different organisms where genome sequence is available with respect to their mucin repertoire.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16887038 PMCID: PMC1552070 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-7-197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Mucins identified in man, mouse, chicken and puffer fish
| Mucin | Typea | Characteristic Pfam domain | Chicken | Human | Mouse | |
| MUC1 | TM | SEA | ? (0/10)d | + | + | ? |
| MUC2 | G | VWD | + (23/53) | + | + | +b |
| MUC3 | TM | SEA | + | +?c | ||
| MUC4 | TM | VWD | + (0/23) | + | + | |
| MUC5AC | G | VWD | + (8/42) | + | + | |
| MUC5B | G | VWD | + (11/37) | + | + | |
| MUC6 | G | VWD | + (19/31) | + | + | |
| MUC7 | + | |||||
| MUC10 | + | |||||
| MUC12 | TM | SEA | + | +?c | ||
| MUC13 | TM | SEA | + (13/24) | + | + | + |
| MUC14 | + | |||||
| MUC15 | TM | + | ||||
| MUC16 | TM | SEA | + (0/16) | + | + | |
| MUC17 | TM | SEA | + | +?c | ||
| MUC19 | G | VWD | + | + | ||
| MUC20 | + | + | ||||
| Ovomucin | VWD | + (45/45) |
a 'TM' refers to transmembrane domain and 'G' gel-forming mucin
bAll VWD-containing mucins in Fugu rubripes were named Muc2, although the evolutionary relationship of these mucins to the human mucins MUC2/5AC/5B/6 is not clear.
cThe mucin gene cluster in mouse for the Muc3/Muc12/Muc17 mucins is incompletely sequenced. A mouse mucin has been described as Muc3 [42], but is most likely the orthologue of the human MUC17.
dThe numbers within parentheses indicate the number of exons supported by chicken ESTs as compared to the total number of exons. For Muc1, Muc5ac, and Muc16 the indicated total number of exons is a minimum number as the complete gene structure is not known.
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree of von Willebrand D domains in human and chicken mucins. A neighbor-joining tree was obtained by ClustalW using 1000 bootstrap replicates. Bootstrap percentages above 50 are shown. Groups containing the VWD1, VWD2, VWD3 and VWD4 domains of mucin type are shown with a shaded background. Animals represented are human (h), mouse (m) and chicken (c).
Figure 2Phylogenetic tree of SEA domains in human, mouse, chicken and zebrafish. A neighbor-joining tree was obtained by ClustalW using 1000 bootstrap replicates. Bootstrap percentages above 50 are shown. The groups containing the Muc1, Muc13 and Muc16 mucins are shown with a shaded background. Animals represented are human (h), mouse (m), chicken (c) and zebrafish (z).
Figure 3Organization of the gene cluster for gel-forming mucins in chicken as compared to man. The orientation of the genes is indicated by arrows. The major difference between the two organisms is the presence of the ovomucin gene in chicken.
Figure 4Domain organization of mucins in the chicken gel-forming mucin cluster. Dotted lines indicate a gap in the genome assembly and when such gaps occur, a minimum size of the protein is indicated.
Figure 5Comparison of the MUC13 sequence in man and chicken. A. Genomic organization of exons and introns and the domains encoded by the exons. B. Amino acid sequences of the PTS (mucin) domains of the chicken and human MUC13. For the chicken PTS each line corresponds to one exon. C. Alignment of the amino acid sequence C-terminal of the PTS domain. Identical and similar amino acids are indicated with black and grey, respectively, and domains are shown under each sequence.