Abstract

Prions are units of propagation of an altered state of a protein or proteins; prions can propagate from organism to organism, through cooption of other protein copies. Prions contain no necessary nucleic acids, and are important both as both pathogenic agents, and as a potential force in epigenetic phenomena. The original prions were derived from a misfolded form of the mammalian Prion Protein PrP. Infection by these prions causes neurodegenerative diseases. Other prions cause non-Mendelian inheritance in budding yeast, and sometimes act as diseases of yeast. We report the bioinformatic construction of the PrionHome, a database of >2000 prion-related sequences. The data was collated from various public and private resources and filtered for redundancy. The data was then processed according to a transparent classification system of prionogenic sequences (i.e., sequences that can make prions), prionoids (i.e., proteins that propagate like prions between individual cells), and other prion-related phenomena. There are eight PrionHome classifications for sequences. The first four classifications are derived from experimental observations: prionogenic sequences, prionoids, other prion-related phenomena, and prion interactors. The second four classifications are derived from sequence analysis: orthologs, paralogs, pseudogenes, and candidate-prionogenic sequences. Database entries list: supporting information for PrionHome classifications, prion-determinant areas (where relevant), and disordered and compositionally-biased regions. Also included are literature references for the PrionHome classifications, transcripts and genomic coordinates, and structural data (including comparative models made for the PrionHome from manually curated alignments). We provide database usage examples for both vertebrate and fungal prion contexts. Using the database data, we have performed a detailed analysis of the compositional biases in known budding-yeast prionogenic sequences, showing that the only abundant bias pattern is for asparagine bias with subsidiary serine bias. We anticipate that this database will be a useful experimental aid and reference resource. It is freely available at: http://libaio.biol.mcgill.ca/prion.

Highlights

  • Prions are alternative, propagating states of normal cellular proteins, that propagate from organism to organism, through infection or inheritance

  • Prions were originally defined as the causative agent of mammalian transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), diseases which include scrapie in sheep and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans [1]

  • Developments & Updates We have reported the bioinformatic construction of Prion-Home, a comprehensive database resource for prions and other prion-related molecules

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Summary

Introduction

Prions are alternative, propagating states of normal cellular proteins, that propagate from organism to organism, through infection or inheritance. Prions were originally defined as the causative agent of mammalian transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), diseases which include scrapie in sheep and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans [1]. TSEs can arise in inherited, sporadic or infectious forms. Infectious prions lack nucleic acids [1], and rely on the presence of a host prion-protein gene for propagation [2]. Whereas the normal cellular form of the prion protein (PrP-C) is mostly alpha-helical [3] [4], the infectious form of the prion protein (PrP-Sc), is mostly beta-sheet [5], which indicates a dramatic conformational change in the infectious protein

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