Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences (Nov 2022)

Effect of naturally-occurring mutations on the stability and function of cancer-associated NQO1: Comparison of experiments and computation

  • Juan Luis Pacheco-Garcia,
  • Matteo Cagiada,
  • Kelly Tienne-Matos,
  • Eduardo Salido,
  • Kresten Lindorff-Larsen,
  • Angel L. Pey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2022.1063620
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Recent advances in DNA sequencing technologies are revealing a large individual variability of the human genome. Our capacity to establish genotype-phenotype correlations in such large-scale is, however, limited. This task is particularly challenging due to the multifunctional nature of many proteins. Here we describe an extensive analysis of the stability and function of naturally-occurring variants (found in the COSMIC and gnomAD databases) of the cancer-associated human NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1). First, we performed in silico saturation mutagenesis studies (>5,000 substitutions) aimed to identify regions in NQO1 important for stability and function. We then experimentally characterized twenty-two naturally-occurring variants in terms of protein levels during bacterial expression, solubility, thermal stability, and coenzyme binding. These studies showed a good overall correlation between experimental analysis and computational predictions; also the magnitude of the effects of the substitutions are similarly distributed in variants from the COSMIC and gnomAD databases. Outliers in these experimental-computational genotype-phenotype correlations remain, and we discuss these on the grounds and limitations of our approaches. Our work represents a further step to characterize the mutational landscape of NQO1 in the human genome and may help to improve high-throughput in silico tools for genotype-phenotype correlations in this multifunctional protein associated with disease.

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