SAAVpedia: Identification, Functional Annotation, and Retrieval of Single Amino Acid Variants for Proteogenomic Interpretation

2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 4133-4142
Author(s):  
Soo Youn Lee ◽  
Heeyoun Hwang ◽  
Young-Mook Kang ◽  
Hyejin Kim ◽  
Dong Geun Kim ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily C. Hartman ◽  
Christopher M. Jakobson ◽  
Andrew H. Favor ◽  
Marco J. Lobba ◽  
Ester Álvarez-Benedicto ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth A. Matreyek ◽  
Lea M. Starita ◽  
Jason J. Stephany ◽  
Beth Martin ◽  
Melissa A. Chiasson ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTDetermining the pathogenicity of human genetic variants is a critical challenge, and functional assessment is often the only option. Experimentally characterizing millions of possible missense variants in thousands of clinically important genes will likely require generalizable, scalable assays. Here we describe Variant Abundance by Massively Parallel Sequencing (VAMP-seq), which measures the effects of thousands of missense variants of a protein on intracellular abundance in a single experiment. We apply VAMP-seq to quantify the abundance of 7,595 single amino acid variants of two proteins, PTEN and TPMT, in which functional variants are clinically actionable. We identify 1,079 PTEN and 805 TPMT single amino acid variants that result in low protein abundance, and may be pathogenic or alter drug metabolism, respectively. We observe selection for low-abundance PTEN variants in cancer, and our abundance data suggest that a PTEN variant accounting for ~10% of PTEN missense variants in melanomas functions via a dominant negative mechanism. Finally, we demonstrate that VAMP-seq can be applied to other genes, highlighting its potential as a generalizable assay for characterizing missense variants.


2018 ◽  
Vol 90 (16) ◽  
pp. 9904-9911 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Rachel Mehaffey ◽  
James D. Sanders ◽  
Dustin D. Holden ◽  
Carol L. Nilsson ◽  
Jennifer S. Brodbelt

2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 421-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi-Duan Su ◽  
Quan-Hu Sheng ◽  
Qing-Run Li ◽  
Hao Chi ◽  
Xi Jiang ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 778-786 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheryl F. Lichti ◽  
Ekaterina Mostovenko ◽  
Paul A. Wadsworth ◽  
Gillian C. Lynch ◽  
B. Montgomery Pettitt ◽  
...  

eLife ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom O Delmont ◽  
Evan Kiefl ◽  
Ozsel Kilinc ◽  
Ozcan C Esen ◽  
Ismail Uysal ◽  
...  

Members of the SAR11 order Pelagibacterales dominate the surface oceans. Their extensive diversity challenges emerging operational boundaries defined for microbial 'species' and complicates efforts of population genetics to study their evolution. Here, we employed single-amino acid variants (SAAVs) to investigate ecological and evolutionary forces that maintain the genomic heterogeneity within ubiquitous SAR11 populations we accessed through metagenomic read recruitment using a single isolate genome. Integrating amino acid and protein biochemistry with metagenomics revealed that systematic purifying selection against deleterious variants governs non-synonymous variation among very closely related populations of SAR11. SAAVs partitioned metagenomes into two main groups matching large-scale oceanic current temperatures, and six finer proteotypes that connect distant oceanic regions. These findings suggest that environmentally-mediated selection plays a critical role in the journey of cosmopolitan surface ocean microbial populations, and the idea ‘everything is everywhere but the environment selects’ has credence even at the finest resolutions.


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