Abstract

Repulsive guidance molecules, RGMA, RGMB, and RGMC, are related proteins discovered independently through different experimental paradigms. They are encoded by single copy genes in mammalian and other vertebrate genomes, and are ~50% identical in amino acid sequence. The importance of RGM actions in human physiology has not been realized, as most research has focused on non‐human models, although mutations in RGMC are the cause of the severe iron storage disorder, juvenile hemochromatosis. Here I show that repositories of human genomic and population genetic data can be used as starting points for discovery and for developing new testable hypotheses about each of these paralogs in human biology and disease susceptibility. Information was extracted, aggregated, and analyzed from the Ensembl and UCSC Genome Browsers, the Exome Aggregation Consortium, the Genotype‐Tissue Expression project portal, the cBio portal for Cancer Genomics, and the National Cancer Institute Genomic Data Commons data site. Results identify extensive variation in gene expression patterns, substantial alternative RNA splicing, and possible missense alterations and other modifications in the coding regions of each of the three genes, with many putative mutations being detected in individuals with different types of cancers. Moreover, selected amino acid substitutions are highly prevalent in the world population, with minor allele frequencies of up to 37% for RGMA and up to 8% for RGMB. These results indicate that protein sequence variation is common in the human RGM family, and raises the possibility that individual variants will have a significant population impact on human physiology and/or disease predisposition.

Highlights

  • The repulsive guidance molecule (RGM) family consists of three members, RGMA, RGMB, and RGMC (Monnier et al 2002; Kuninger et al 2004; Niederkofler et al 2004; Papanikolaou et al 2004; Samad et al 2004; Schmidtmer and Engelkamp 2004), that are encoded by single-copy genes in human and other vertebrate genomes (Severyn et al 2009)

  • By contrast with the chromosomal regions of RGMA or RGMB, the RGMC/HFE2/HJV locus on human chromosome 1q21.1 is far more gene dense (Fig. 1C), and contains nine other genes that are present in the orthologous mouse locus (Severyn et al 2009)

  • Information extracted from publically available databases has been collected and analyzed here to gain insights into the genomics and population genetics of the RGM family in humans

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Summary

Introduction

The repulsive guidance molecule (RGM) family consists of three members, RGMA, RGMB, and RGMC ( known as HFE2 and HJV) (Monnier et al 2002; Kuninger et al 2004; Niederkofler et al 2004; Papanikolaou et al 2004; Samad et al 2004; Schmidtmer and Engelkamp 2004), that are encoded by single-copy genes in human and other vertebrate genomes (Severyn et al 2009). Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society

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