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    J Biol Chem. 1990 May 25;265(15):8610-7.

    Structural analysis of human apolipoprotein A-I variants. Amino acid substitutions are nonrandomly distributed throughout the apolipoprotein A-I primary structure.

    Source

    Institut für Arterioskleroseforschung, Universität Münster, Federal Republic of Germany.

    Abstract

    In the course of an electrophoretic mutation screening program of 32,000 dried blood samples from newborns, 17 genetic variants of apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) were found and structurally analyzed. The following defects were identified by the combined use of high performance liquid chromatography, time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, and sequence analysis: Pro3----Arg (1 x), Pro4----Arg (1 x), Asp89----Glu (1 x), Lys107----0 (4 x), Lys107----Met (2 x), Glu139----Gly (2 x), Glu147----Val (1 x), Pro165----Arg (4 x), and Glu198----Lys (1 x). The distribution of point mutations in the apoA-I gene leading to these 9 and 11 other variants of apoA-I reported previously was statistically analyzed. Substitutions are overrepresented in the 10 amino-terminal amino acids (p less than 0.001, chi 2-test) and in residues 103-177 (p less than 0.025, chi 2-test) or residues 103-198 (p less than 0.05, chi 2-test), respectively. We further noted the following. (i) Prolines were substituted by arginine or histidine residues at a frequency much higher than expected on the basis of random nucleotide substitutions (5 out of 18 "electrically non-neutral" amino acid substitutions, p less than 0.001, chi 2-test). These substitutions are the result of transversions of cytosines contained within stretches of at least 5 consecutive cytosines in the apoA-I gene. The observed hypervariability of the apoA-I amino terminus, therefore, might be caused by a hot spot for mutation formed by the 7 subsequent cytosines in codons 3, 4, and 5. (ii) CpG dinucleotides were overrepresentatively affected by C----T transitions (5 out of 18 electrically nonneutral amino acid substitution, p less than 0.001, chi 2-test). The hypervariability of the apoA-I alpha-helical domain might therefore be caused by CpG dinucleotides predominantly occurring in codons 120-208 of apoA-I (82 out of 125). (iii) Comparison of mutation sites in the human apoA-I gene with sites of nonsynonymous substitutions revealed that amino acid substitutions found in human apoA-I were predominantly localized in areas that were little conserved during mammalian evolution. These regions may therefore represent areas of less structural constraint for the function of apoA-I.

    PMID:
    2111322
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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