Elsevier

Genetics in Medicine

Volume 18, Issue 10, October 2016, Pages 1029-1036
Genetics in Medicine

Original Research Article
Establishing the precise evolutionary history of a gene improves prediction of disease-causing missense mutations

https://doi.org/10.1038/gim.2015.208Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

Purpose

Predicting the phenotypic effects of mutations has become an important application in clinical genetic diagnostics. Computational tools evaluate the behavior of the variant over evolutionary time and assume that variations seen during the course of evolution are probably benign in humans. However, current tools do not take into account orthologous/paralogous relationships. Paralogs have dramatically different roles in Mendelian diseases. For example, whereas inactivating mutations in the NPC1 gene cause the neurodegenerative disorder Niemann-Pick C, inactivating mutations in its paralog NPC1L1 are not disease-causing and, moreover, are implicated in protection from coronary heart disease.

Methods

We identified major events in NPC1 evolution and revealed and compared orthologs and paralogs of the human NPC1 gene through phylogenetic and protein sequence analyses. We predicted whether an amino acid substitution affects protein function by reducing the organism’s fitness.

Results

Removing the paralogs and distant homologs improved the overall performance of categorizing disease-causing and benign amino acid substitutions.

Conclusion

The results show that a thorough evolutionary analysis followed by identification of orthologs improves the accuracy in predicting disease-causing missense mutations. We anticipate that this approach will be used as a reference in the interpretation of variants in other genetic diseases as well.

Genet Med18 10, 1029–1036.

Keywords

missense mutation prediction
Niemann-Pick
NPC1
NPC1L1
orthologs and paralogs in disease

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