Unlocking the Door for Precision Medicine in Rare Conditions: Structural and Functional Consequences of Missense ACVR1 Variants.
Garima NagarShradheya R R GuptaVanshika RustagiRavindran Kumar PramodArchana SinghMonika PahujaIndrakant Kumar SinghPublished in: Omics : a journal of integrative biology (2024)
Rare diseases and conditions have thus far received relatively less attention in the field of precision/personalized medicine than common chronic diseases. There is a dire need for orphan drug discovery and therapeutics in ways that are informed by the precision/personalized medicine scholarship. Moreover, people with rare conditions, when considered collectively across diseases worldwide, impact many communities. In this overarching context, Activin A Receptor Type 1 (ACVR1) is a transmembrane kinase from the transforming growth factor-β superfamily and plays a critical role in modulating the bone morphogenetic protein signaling. Missense variants of the ACVR1 gene result in modifications in structure and function and, by extension, abnormalities and have been predominantly linked with two rare conditions: fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva and diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma. We report here an extensive bioinformatic analyses assessing the pool of 50,951 variants and forecast seven highly destabilizing mutations (R206H, G356D, R258S, G328W, G328E, R375P, and R202I) that can significantly alter the structure and function of the native protein. Protein-protein interaction and ConSurf analyses revealed the crucial interactions and localization of highly deleterious mutations in highly conserved domains that may impact the binding and functioning of the protein. cBioPortal, CanSAR Black, and existing literature affirmed the association of these destabilizing mutations with posterior fossa ependymoma, uterine corpus carcinoma, and pediatric brain cancer. The current findings suggest these deleterious nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms as potential candidates for future functional annotations and validations associated with rare conditions, further aiding the development of precision medicine in rare diseases.
Keyphrases
- protein protein
- transforming growth factor
- copy number
- drug discovery
- systematic review
- working memory
- genome wide
- intellectual disability
- gene expression
- signaling pathway
- amino acid
- autism spectrum disorder
- risk assessment
- papillary thyroid
- dna methylation
- high grade
- low grade
- white matter
- resting state
- climate change
- protein kinase
- childhood cancer