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In Silico Structural and Biochemical Functional Analysis of a Novel CYP21A2 Pathogenic Variant.

Michal CohenEmanuele PignattiMonica DinesAdi MoryNina EkhilevitchRachel KolodnyChrista E FlückDov Tiosano
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2020)
Classical congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) caused by pathogenic variants in the steroid 21-hydroxylase gene (CYP21A2) is a severe life-threatening condition. We present a detailed investigation of the molecular and functional characteristics of a novel pathogenic variant in this gene. The patient, 46 XX newborn, was diagnosed with classical salt wasting CAH in the neonatal period after initially presenting with ambiguous genitalia. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe analysis demonstrated a full deletion of the paternal CYP21A2 gene, and Sanger sequencing revealed a novel de novo CYP21A2 variant c.694-696del (E232del) in the other allele. This variant resulted in the deletion of a non-conserved single amino acid, and its functional relevance was initially undetermined. We used both in silico and in vitro methods to determine the mechanistic significance of this mutation. Computational analysis relied on the solved structure of the protein (Protein-data-bank ID 4Y8W), structure prediction of the mutated protein, evolutionary analysis, and manual inspection. We predicted impaired stability and functionality of the protein due to a rotatory disposition of amino acids in positions downstream of the deletion. In vitro biochemical evaluation of enzymatic activity supported these predictions, demonstrating reduced protein levels to 22% compared to the wild-type form and decreased hydroxylase activity to 1-4%. This case demonstrates the potential of combining in-silico analysis based on evolutionary information and structure prediction with biochemical studies. This approach can be used to investigate other genetic variants to understand their potential effects.
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