Abstract

Comparative analyses between human disease and non-disease genes are of great interest in understanding human disease gene evolution. However, the progression of neurodegenerative diseases (NDD) involving amyloid formation in specific brain regions is still unknown. Therefore, in this study, we mainly focused our analysis on the evolutionary features of human NDD genes with respect to non-disease genes. Here, we observed that human NDD genes are evolutionarily conserved relative to non-disease genes. To elucidate the conserved nature of NDD genes, we incorporated the evolutionary attributes like gene expression level, number of regulatory miRNAs, protein connectivity, intrinsic disorder content and relative aggregation propensity in our analysis. Our studies demonstrate that NDD genes have higher gene expression levels in favor of their lower evolutionary rates. Additionally, we observed that NDD genes have higher number of different regulatory miRNAs target sites and also have higher interaction partners than the non-disease genes. Moreover, miRNA targeted genes are known to have higher disorder content. In contrast, our analysis exclusively established that NDD genes have lower disorder content. In favor of our analysis, we found that NDD gene encoded proteins are enriched with multi interface hubs (party hubs) with lower disorder contents. Since, proteins with higher disorder content need to adapt special structure to reduce their aggregation propensity, NDD proteins found to have elevated relative aggregation propensity (RAP) in support of their lower disorder content. Finally, our categorical regression analysis confirmed the underlined relative dominance of protein connectivity, 3′UTR length, RAP, nature of hubs (singlish/multi interface) and disorder content for such evolutionary rates variation between human NDD genes and non-disease genes.

Highlights

  • The pathogenesis of neuronal vulnerability in neurodegenerative diseases (NDD), involving amyloid formation in specific brain regions, is still not clear

  • We found that NDD genes encoded proteins are highly aggregation prone with respect to non-disease gene encoded proteins

  • We have identified that gene expression level, number of miRNAs targeting the gene, 39UTR length, percentage of intrinsically disordered residues, number of interacting partners, natures of hub and relative aggregation propensity (RAP) are the attributes regulating the evolutionary rates of the NDD genes with respect to non-disease genes

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Summary

Introduction

The pathogenesis of neuronal vulnerability in neurodegenerative diseases (NDD), involving amyloid formation in specific brain regions, is still not clear. Decades-long continuous efforts have facilitated to characterize protein evolutionary rates with the signatures of gene expression level [2,3], protein length [4,5], aggregation propensity [6,7], number of interacting partners [8], miRNA targets [9], gene dispensability [10,11] and protein disorder content [12,13]. Due to lack of proper 3D structure, protein intrinsically disordered region provide global flexibility that promotes binding to their partners in protein-protein interactome [14,15]. To resolve the ambiguity of relations affecting protein evolutionary rates, we analyzed human aggregation prone neurodegenerative disease genes compare to non-disease genes. We considered protein intrinsic disorder content, miRNA targeting and protein connectivity as the functions of evolutionary rates

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