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Diverse Molecular Mechanisms Underlying Pathogenic Protein Mutations: Beyond the Loss-of-Function Paradigm

Lisa Backwell, Joseph A. Marsh

2022Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics129 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Most known disease-causing mutations occur in protein-coding regions of DNA. While some of these involve a loss of protein function (e.g., through premature stop codons or missense changes that destabilize protein folding), many act via alternative molecular mechanisms and have dominant-negative or gain-of-function effects. In nearly all cases, these non-loss-of-function mutations can be understood by considering interactions of the wild-type and mutant protein with other molecules, such as proteins, nucleic acids, or small ligands and substrates. Here, we review the diverse molecular mechanisms by which pathogenic mutations can have non-loss-of-function effects, including by disrupting interactions, increasing binding affinity, changing binding specificity, causing assembly-mediated dominant-negative and dominant-positive effects, creating novel interactions, and promoting aggregation and phase separation. We believe that increased awareness of these diverse molecular disease mechanisms will lead to improved diagnosis (and ultimately treatment) of human genetic disorders.

Topics & Concepts

Loss functionBiologyMissense mutationFunction (biology)GeneticsMutationMutantProtein functionComputational biologyProtein foldingGeneCell biologyPhenotypeRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancer
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