Abstract

Background: Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency (A1ATD) is a progressive lung disease caused by inherited pathogenic variants in the SERPINA1 gene. However, their actual role in maintenance of structural and functional characteristics of the corresponding α-1 anti-trypsin (A1AT) protein is not well characterized. Methods: The A1ATD causative SERPINA1 missense variants were initially collected from variant databases, and they were filtered based on their pathogenicity potential. Then, the tertiary protein models were constructed and the impact of individual variants on secondary structure, stability, protein-protein interactions, and molecular dynamic (MD) features of the A1AT protein was studied using diverse computational methods. Results: We identified that A1ATD linked SERPINA1 missense variants like F76S, S77F, L278P, E288V, G216C, and H358R are highly deleterious as per the consensual prediction scores of SIFT, PolyPhen, FATHMM, M-CAP and REVEL computational methods. All these variants were predicted to alter free energy dynamics and destabilize the A1AT protein. These variants were seen to cause minor structural drifts at residue level (RMSD = <2Å) of the protein. Interestingly, S77F and L278P variants subtly alter the size of secondary structural elements like beta pleated sheets and loops. The residue level fluctuations at 100ns simulation confirm the highly damaging structural consequences of all the six missense variants on the conformation dynamics of the A1AT protein. Moreover, these variants were also predicted to cause functional deformities by negatively impacting the binding energy of A1AT protein with NE ligand molecule. Conclusion: This study adds a new computational biology dimension to interpret the genotype-protein phenotype relationship between SERPINA1 pathogenic variants with its structural plasticity and functional behavior with NE ligand molecule contributing to the Alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency. Our results support that A1ATD complications correlates with the conformational flexibility and its propensity of A1AT protein polymerization when misfolded.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call