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M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal

Catalytically defective rare variants of Sialic acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) have previously been linked to autoimmunity. Studies presented here confirm that the M89V SIAE protein and all other products of common variant alleles of SIAE are catalytically normal. Although overexpressing transfected no...

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Autores principales: Chellappa, Vasant, Taylor, Kendra N., Pedrick, Kathryn, Donado, Carlos, Netravali, Ilka Arun, Haider, Khaleda, Cariappa, Annaiah, Dalomba, Natasha F., Pillai, Shiv
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3538537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23308225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0053453
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author Chellappa, Vasant
Taylor, Kendra N.
Pedrick, Kathryn
Donado, Carlos
Netravali, Ilka Arun
Haider, Khaleda
Cariappa, Annaiah
Dalomba, Natasha F.
Pillai, Shiv
author_facet Chellappa, Vasant
Taylor, Kendra N.
Pedrick, Kathryn
Donado, Carlos
Netravali, Ilka Arun
Haider, Khaleda
Cariappa, Annaiah
Dalomba, Natasha F.
Pillai, Shiv
author_sort Chellappa, Vasant
collection PubMed
description Catalytically defective rare variants of Sialic acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) have previously been linked to autoimmunity. Studies presented here confirm that the M89V SIAE protein and all other products of common variant alleles of SIAE are catalytically normal. Although overexpressing transfected non-lymphoid cells secrete small amounts of SIAE that can associate with the cell surface, normal human lymphocytes do not exhibit cell surface SIAE, supporting genetic evidence in mice that indicates that this protein functions in a lymphocyte intrinsic manner. Analyses of the plasma proteome also indicate that SIAE is not secreted in vivo. A re-analysis exclusively of catalytically defective rare variant alleles of SIAE in subjects in which this gene was completely sequenced confirmed an association of SIAE with autoimmunity. A subset of catalytically defective rare variant SIAE alleles has previously been typed in a large genotyping study comparing a diverse group of disease subjects and controls; our re-analysis of this data shows that catalytically defective alleles are enriched in disease subjects. These data suggest that SIAE may be associated with autoimmunity and that further study of catalytically defective rare variant SIAE alleles in terms of autoimmune disease susceptibility is strongly warranted.
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spelling pubmed-35385372013-01-10 M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal Chellappa, Vasant Taylor, Kendra N. Pedrick, Kathryn Donado, Carlos Netravali, Ilka Arun Haider, Khaleda Cariappa, Annaiah Dalomba, Natasha F. Pillai, Shiv PLoS One Research Article Catalytically defective rare variants of Sialic acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) have previously been linked to autoimmunity. Studies presented here confirm that the M89V SIAE protein and all other products of common variant alleles of SIAE are catalytically normal. Although overexpressing transfected non-lymphoid cells secrete small amounts of SIAE that can associate with the cell surface, normal human lymphocytes do not exhibit cell surface SIAE, supporting genetic evidence in mice that indicates that this protein functions in a lymphocyte intrinsic manner. Analyses of the plasma proteome also indicate that SIAE is not secreted in vivo. A re-analysis exclusively of catalytically defective rare variant alleles of SIAE in subjects in which this gene was completely sequenced confirmed an association of SIAE with autoimmunity. A subset of catalytically defective rare variant SIAE alleles has previously been typed in a large genotyping study comparing a diverse group of disease subjects and controls; our re-analysis of this data shows that catalytically defective alleles are enriched in disease subjects. These data suggest that SIAE may be associated with autoimmunity and that further study of catalytically defective rare variant SIAE alleles in terms of autoimmune disease susceptibility is strongly warranted. Public Library of Science 2013-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3538537/ /pubmed/23308225 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0053453 Text en © 2013 Chellappa 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
Chellappa, Vasant
Taylor, Kendra N.
Pedrick, Kathryn
Donado, Carlos
Netravali, Ilka Arun
Haider, Khaleda
Cariappa, Annaiah
Dalomba, Natasha F.
Pillai, Shiv
M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal
title M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal
title_full M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal
title_fullStr M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal
title_full_unstemmed M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal
title_short M89V Sialic Acid Acetyl Esterase (SIAE) and All Other Non-Synonymous Common Variants of This Gene Are Catalytically Normal
title_sort m89v sialic acid acetyl esterase (siae) and all other non-synonymous common variants of this gene are catalytically normal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3538537/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23308225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0053453
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