| Literature DB >> 26178806 |
Abstract
The present treatment of childhood T-cell leukemias involves the systemic administration of prokaryotic L-asparaginase (ASNase), which depletes plasma Asparagine (Asn) and inhibits protein synthesis. The mechanism of therapeutic action of ASNase is poorly understood, as are the etiologies of the side-effects incurred by treatment. Protein expression from genes bearing Asn homopolymeric coding regions (N-hCR) may be particularly susceptible to Asn level fluctuation. In mammals, N-hCR are rare, short and conserved. In humans, misfunctions of genes encoding N-hCR are associated with a cluster of disorders that mimic ASNase therapy side-effects which include impaired glycemic control, dislipidemia, pancreatitis, compromised vascular integrity, and neurological dysfunction. This paper proposes that dysregulation of Asn homeostasis, potentially even by ASNase produced by the microbiome, may contribute to several clinically important syndromes by altering expression of N-hCR bearing genes. By altering amino acid abundance and modulating ribosome translocation rates at codon repeats, the microbiomic environment may contribute to genome decoding and to shaping the proteome. We suggest that impaired translation at poly Asn codons elevates diabetes risk and severity.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26178806 PMCID: PMC4533780 DOI: 10.3892/ijmm.2015.2285
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Med ISSN: 1107-3756 Impact factor: 4.101
Figure 1Asn homopolymeric coding regions (N-hCR)-bearing-genes from 8N-hCR to 5N-hCR. The 17 human genes with N-hCR of length greater than five. Human genes are grouped by N-hCR length. Rows list genes, labelled on the left and grouped by N-hCR length in descending order from insulin-receptor-substrate 2 (IRS2) with 8N-hCR. Columns of colored panels suggest (manually annotated) functional categories: purple, fiabetes and metabolism; yellow, membrane and mitochondria; blue, neuro; pink, cancer and immunity; grey, cardiovascular, blood and bone; green, DNA/RNA. Karlin et al (1) have speculated that N-hCR shorter than five in length would arise by chance. However, Kriel and Kriel (2) demonstrates that the statistical difference between mammals and nonmammals continues to hold at least down to 3N-hCR. The cutoff threshold of significance would then reduce to 2N-hCR, and to the definition of a transcription unit, cf. VEZF1, which has multiple cDNAs defining infrequently used exons. N.B. Adjacent, potentially cojoined (380) genes are used to categorize PAPPA-AS1 and ALS2CR11. Like the PAPPA locus, the MEPC2 locus also has an N-hCR bearing antisense transcript, with a 7N-hCR (AF361491); The metabolic disease and retinal development associated gene SIX3 has an antisense N-hCR bearing transcript in human SIX3-AS1 (NR_1037686.1) and mouse SIX3-OS1 (NR_038083.1). SNP rs16882396 marks the association of periodontal disease with TMEM178B. The 49 genes with 4N-hCR are: ACACA, ACACB, AGBL2, BAI2, BMPR2, C2orf61, CD9, CFTR, CHRM2, CNOT10, EOMES, EPPIN, EPPIN-WFDC6, EVI2A, FAM193A, FRS3, GTF2I, IL9R, KIAA1841, KIF3C, KLF17, LEMD3, LRP6, MAML2, MYRF, NCOA1, PARP3, PEAK1, PPP1R13B, RNF103, SH3D19, SI, SLIT1, SLIT2, SLIT3, SNAP91, TAB2, TAB3, TAX1BP1, TEC, TMEM57, TOX3, TRPM6, TRPM7, TTC8, TTLL5, UBE4A, ZXDA, ZXDB Unorthodox human proteins deserving closer attention are from unusual cDNAs: Map3K24N-hCR AAH65755.1; TCRα5N-hCR AIE11180.1; Vκ5N-hCR AAO11865; and Vλ4N-hCR AAD29331.1. The germline V regions of immunoglobulin (Ig) λ as well as T cell receptor AlphaJ regions are represented in Table I as 3N-hCR. However, there are rearranged cDNAs encoding for up to 5N-hCR in some hypervariable regions (HVR) that do not appear in the germline N-hCR (used for assigning length of N-hCR when classifying these genes). It is unclear what benefits, if any, could accrue to an Ig synthesized and, potentially, folded at a rate regulated by Asn levels at N-hCR. An arbitrary list of genes that may respond to fluctuations in other amino acids include CNDP1, CYP21A2, SELT, SELM (L-hCR); CACNA1D (M-hCR); HSD11B1 (Y-hCR); NR4A3 (H-hCR); TAF9, URI1, ASPN, EFTUD2, GLTSCR1L, THBS4 (D-hCR); HRC (D-, E-, H-hCR); ATAD2 (S-, D-hCR); EIF5B (K-, D-, E-hCR); KCNMA1, MAP3K1, CXXC4, WDR26, TNRC18, SRRM2 (S-, T-, G-hCR); CACNA1A (H, N, Q-hCR); POU4F2 (M-, G-, H-, S-hCR); POU3F2 (G-, H-, Q-hCR); SKIDA1 (H-, E-, A-hCR); USP34 (H-, N-hCR); ATXN1, ATXN2, ATXN3, ATXN7, AR, KMT2D, KMT2C, MAMC2, MAML3, FOXP2, ARID1A, ARID1B, ARID3B MED12, MED15, NCOA3, NCOA6, IRF2BPL, VEZF1, ABCF1 and HTT (Q-hCR). The hCR appear in proteins from the NCBI homologene (381) database.
Alphabetical listing of 765 human genes 3N-hCR and higher (>3N-hCR).
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The top 17 listed on Fig. 1 from 8N-hCR to 5N-hCR are in bold font; the 49 genes with 4N-hCR are underlined. A total of 699 genes on this list have 3N-hCR and are in normal font (not bold or underlined). 17×5N-hCR, 49×4N-hCR, 699×3N-hCR. Each N-hCR-bearing-gene and its corresponding protein in the NCBI homologene database, were used in this analysis except for the following 28 genes: APOL1 isfX1, X2; ANKRD28 iCRA_g; C1orf86/FAAP20 tvi4X1,2,3; DMKN i5; FBXO38 iCRA_d; FKBP7 isf23 AF100751.1; IGLV10-54 BAA19993.1; KHDRBS2 iCRA_c; loc102725117 isf.X1-7; LRTOMT isf1c,1a; MARCH1 ix1; MASP1 isf1; MGAM int iX1; MTCH1 AAD34059.1; NTRK3 isof ×10, XP_006720612; PAAAA-AS1 AAV41520.1; PTPRB iX5; PHACTR1 iX6; RAPGEF2 iX7; RNF128 isf2; SH3D19 isfX2,4,5,6,8; SNAP91 isfD; TRAJ31,39,43 AAB86765.1, AAB86758.1, AAB86754.1; VEZF1 iCRA_a,c; WFDC6 iCRA_a,b; WDR17 iX5; XIRP2 tv5 and tv3; ZFP1 iX1. A number of N-hCR-bearing-genes are in GTPase, GPCR or odorant receptor families, or can be grouped as involved with ubiquitin conjugation, DNA repair, RNA processing,or pattern recognition response. The relative frequency of appearance of such genes among the N-hCR-bearing genes versus their proportional representation in the human genome remains uncharacterized. CKS2, on a list of genes that are devoid of Asn codons in mammalia, is a paralog of a plasmodium protein (XP_001352106) which has the longest contiguous stretch of 83 Asn residues in plasmodia (382,383). When the plasmodium gene is compared to the human database, the best 3 homologies are to CKS2, CKS1B and the N-hCR-bearing-gene PPP1R13B-hCR/ASPP1, the promoter of which is silenced by methylation in ALL (384). The balance between CKS2 and CKS1B is thought to play a role in multiple cancers (385), including HHV4 associated nasopharyngeal cancer (386) (along with TRPM74N-hCR). Altered Asn levels could shift the balance between CKS2 and CKS1B to affect cell cycle regulation in multiple cancers including ALL, and, via PPP1R13B, senescence in normal cells (387). Other notable genes devoid of Asn codons are mus APRT (kidney stones) (388) and human BIRC7 (ALL prognosis) (389), LOR (cf. Staph. aureous infection of nares) (390), SEPW1 (cell cycle) (391), TCL1 (leukemia) (392), CSF3 (innate immunity and aneurysms) (393) and KLF16 (proposed master metabolic regulator KLF14) (394).