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Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins

Chromosomal translocations, which often generate chimeric proteins by fusing segments of two distinct genes, represent the single major genetic aberration leading to cancer. We suggest that the unifying theme of these events is a high level of intrinsic structural disorder, enabling fusion proteins...

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Autores principales: Hegyi, Hedi, Buday, László, Tompa, Peter
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2768585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19888473
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000552
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author Hegyi, Hedi
Buday, László
Tompa, Peter
author_facet Hegyi, Hedi
Buday, László
Tompa, Peter
author_sort Hegyi, Hedi
collection PubMed
description Chromosomal translocations, which often generate chimeric proteins by fusing segments of two distinct genes, represent the single major genetic aberration leading to cancer. We suggest that the unifying theme of these events is a high level of intrinsic structural disorder, enabling fusion proteins to evade cellular surveillance mechanisms that eliminate misfolded proteins. Predictions in 406 translocation-related human proteins show that they are significantly enriched in disorder (43.3% vs. 20.7% in all human proteins), they have fewer Pfam domains, and their translocation breakpoints tend to avoid domain splitting. The vicinity of the breakpoint is significantly more disordered than the rest of these already highly disordered fusion proteins. In the unlikely event of domain splitting in fusion it usually spares much of the domain or splits at locations where the newly exposed hydrophobic surface area approximates that of an intact domain. The mechanisms of action of fusion proteins suggest that in most cases their structural disorder is also essential to the acquired oncogenic function, enabling the long-range structural communication of remote binding and/or catalytic elements. In this respect, there are three major mechanisms that contribute to generating an oncogenic signal: (i) a phosphorylation site and a tyrosine-kinase domain are fused, and structural disorder of the intervening region enables intramolecular phosphorylation (e.g., BCR-ABL); (ii) a dimerisation domain fuses with a tyrosine kinase domain and disorder enables the two subunits within the homodimer to engage in permanent intermolecular phosphorylations (e.g., TFG-ALK); (iii) the fusion of a DNA-binding element to a transactivator domain results in an aberrant transcription factor that causes severe misregulation of transcription (e.g. EWS-ATF). Our findings also suggest novel strategies of intervention against the ensuing neoplastic transformations.
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spelling pubmed-27685852009-11-04 Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins Hegyi, Hedi Buday, László Tompa, Peter PLoS Comput Biol Research Article Chromosomal translocations, which often generate chimeric proteins by fusing segments of two distinct genes, represent the single major genetic aberration leading to cancer. We suggest that the unifying theme of these events is a high level of intrinsic structural disorder, enabling fusion proteins to evade cellular surveillance mechanisms that eliminate misfolded proteins. Predictions in 406 translocation-related human proteins show that they are significantly enriched in disorder (43.3% vs. 20.7% in all human proteins), they have fewer Pfam domains, and their translocation breakpoints tend to avoid domain splitting. The vicinity of the breakpoint is significantly more disordered than the rest of these already highly disordered fusion proteins. In the unlikely event of domain splitting in fusion it usually spares much of the domain or splits at locations where the newly exposed hydrophobic surface area approximates that of an intact domain. The mechanisms of action of fusion proteins suggest that in most cases their structural disorder is also essential to the acquired oncogenic function, enabling the long-range structural communication of remote binding and/or catalytic elements. In this respect, there are three major mechanisms that contribute to generating an oncogenic signal: (i) a phosphorylation site and a tyrosine-kinase domain are fused, and structural disorder of the intervening region enables intramolecular phosphorylation (e.g., BCR-ABL); (ii) a dimerisation domain fuses with a tyrosine kinase domain and disorder enables the two subunits within the homodimer to engage in permanent intermolecular phosphorylations (e.g., TFG-ALK); (iii) the fusion of a DNA-binding element to a transactivator domain results in an aberrant transcription factor that causes severe misregulation of transcription (e.g. EWS-ATF). Our findings also suggest novel strategies of intervention against the ensuing neoplastic transformations. Public Library of Science 2009-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2768585/ /pubmed/19888473 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000552 Text en Hegyi et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hegyi, Hedi
Buday, László
Tompa, Peter
Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins
title Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins
title_full Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins
title_fullStr Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins
title_full_unstemmed Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins
title_short Intrinsic Structural Disorder Confers Cellular Viability on Oncogenic Fusion Proteins
title_sort intrinsic structural disorder confers cellular viability on oncogenic fusion proteins
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2768585/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19888473
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000552
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