Abstract

The APOBEC3 gene cluster encodes six cytidine deaminases (A3A-C, A3DE, A3F-H) with single stranded DNA (ssDNA) substrate specificity. For the moment A3A is the only enzyme that can initiate catabolism of both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA. Human A3A expression is initiated from two different methionine codons M1 or M13, both of which are in adequate but sub-optimal Kozak environments. In the present study, we have analyzed the genetic diversity among A3A genes across a wide range of 12 primates including New World monkeys, Old World monkeys and Hominids. Sequence variation was observed in exons 1–4 in all primates with up to 31% overall amino acid variation. Importantly for 3 hominids codon M1 was mutated to a threonine codon or valine codon, while for 5/12 primates strong Kozak M1 or M13 codons were found. Positive selection was apparent along a few branches which differed compared to positive selection in the carboxy-terminal of A3G that clusters with A3A among human cytidine deaminases. In the course of analyses, two novel non-functional A3A-related fragments were identified on chromosome 4 and 8 kb upstream of the A3 locus. This qualitative and quantitative variation among primate A3A genes suggest that subtle differences in function might ensue as more light is shed on this increasingly important enzyme.

Highlights

  • The APOBEC3 seven gene cluster (A3A-C, A3DE, A3F-H) encodes six cytidine deaminases with single stranded DNA substrate specificity [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • Primate A3A cytidine deaminases Twelve primates A3A sequences spanning New and Old World monkeys were derived by amplification of genomic DNA and given aligned to the human sequence (Figure 1)

  • The A3A protein is initiated at codons M1 or M13 giving rise to two different proteins both with single stranded DNA (ssDNA) cytidine deaminase activity [40]

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Summary

Introduction

The APOBEC3 seven gene cluster (A3A-C, A3DE, A3F-H) encodes six cytidine deaminases with single stranded DNA (ssDNA) substrate specificity [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. To date there are no reports of A3 antagonists encoded by these viral genomes. This antiviral role fits with the repeated observation that several A3 genes are up-regulated by type I and II interferons [10,28,29,30,31]. Several A3 enzymes can initiate catabolism of mitochondrial DNA, in which uracil N-glycosylase plays a major role downstream of editing [33]. For the moment A3A is the only enzyme that can initiate catabolism of both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA [33]

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