Download The Sound of a Silent Mutation - ScienceNOW

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Gene expression wikipedia , lookup

Paracrine signalling wikipedia , lookup

Protein–protein interaction wikipedia , lookup

Biosynthesis wikipedia , lookup

Secreted frizzled-related protein 1 wikipedia , lookup

Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Gene regulatory network wikipedia , lookup

Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup

Endogenous retrovirus wikipedia , lookup

Biochemistry wikipedia , lookup

Silencer (genetics) wikipedia , lookup

Proteolysis wikipedia , lookup

Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup

Two-hybrid screening wikipedia , lookup

Genetic code wikipedia , lookup

Protein structure prediction wikipedia , lookup

Gene therapy of the human retina wikipedia , lookup

Mutation wikipedia , lookup

Point mutation wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
The Sound of a Silent Mutation - ScienceNOW
AAAS.ORG
http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2006/12/22-02.html
FEEDBACK
HELP
Daily News
LIBRARIANS
Enter Search Term
ALERTS
News Home
ScienceNOW
ScienceInsider
Premium Content from Science
ACCESS RIGHTS
ADVANCED
MY ACCOUNT
SIGN IN
About Science News
Home > News > ScienceNOW > December 2006 > The Sound of a Silent Mutation
ADVERTISEMENT
The Sound of a Silent Mutation
by Mary Beckman on December 22, 2006 12:00 AM | Permanent Link | 0 Comments
Email
Print |
More
PREVIOUS ARTICLE
NEXT ARTICLE
ADVERTISEMENT
1 of 3
5/9/10 9:59 AM
The Sound of a Silent Mutation - ScienceNOW
http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2006/12/22-02.html
Another dogma in cell biology seems about to be toppled: If a mutation in a
gene doesn't change the basic sequence of building blocks, then it has no
ENLARGE IMAGE
effect. Chava Kimchi-Sarfaty of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in
Bethesda, Maryland, and colleagues report online this week in Science
that such "silent mutations" can, under certain circumstances, determine
how well a final protein performs--an "extremely provocative" result, says
cell biologist William Skach of Oregon Health & Science University in
Portland.
Silent mutations occur when the change of a single DNA nucleotide within
a protein-coding portion of a gene does not affect the sequence of amino
acids that make up the gene's protein. That's possible because proteins
are encoded by "triplets" of nucleotides, each responsible for adding a
Noise.
The normal gene for P-gp (left) and a
triple mutant (right) make the same
amount of protein in the cell. But the
protein's structure and function are
altered.
Credit: C. Kimchi-Sarfaty et al.
particular amino acid to the protein chain. A change in one nucleotide,
however, doesn't always change the triplet's meaning; the mutated triplet may still add the same amino acid. And
when the amino acids of a protein stay the same, researchers believed, so do its structure and function.
But every once in a while, data crop up that don't make sense; for example, a gene called multidrug resistance-1
(MDR-1) has been found to frequently have a particular silent mutation in human cancer cells. MDR-1 produces
P-gp, a protein that pumps chemotherapy drugs out of cancer cells, thus making the drugs useless. Researchers
wondered why the silent mutation, called C3435T, showed up much more frequently than expected for a change that
doesn't have an effect on the cancer cells' survival.
Kimchi-Sarfaty's team made cell lines that had either the normal MDR-1 gene, a version with the C3435T mutation,
versions with either of two other mutations known to occur sometimes along with C3435T (one of them silent as well,
the other nonsilent but without an effect on protein function), and versions with various combinations of two or three
of the mutations.
They found that the mutations individually appeared to have no effect: The P-gp proteins encoded by each gene
variant were just as proficient at pumping drugs out of cells. But cells with the MDR-1 gene containing the C3435T
mutation plus one or two of the other two mutations did a much better job of ridding cancer cells of the drugs,
allowing the cells to live another day.
How is this possible if the variant P-gp has the same string of amino acids as the normal one? To the researchers'
surprise, a biochemical test suggested that the mutant P-gp has a slightly different three-dimensional shape.
Perhaps, Kimchi-Sarfaty says, the silent mutations reside in nucleotide triplets that cells don't use very often, which
could slow down the cell's proteinmaking machinery. Like designs made with Silly String spraying out at different
velocities, the folding of an amino acid chain into a 3D structure is somewhat speed-dependent, and slower
production could cause the protein to take an altered final form. The cell might be able to compensate for one silent
mutation but not for multiple rarely used triplets.
The idea that silent mutations might have such effects is "an entirely new concept," Skach says. His prediction: More
researchers will start listening to what silent mutations have to say.
Email
0
Print | 0
Login
Share
tweet
Share
More
Your name (required)
This Page
What's on your mind...
Add images
Echo 0 Items
Follow
Cancel
Post
Admin
Social Networking by
2 of 3
5/9/10 9:59 AM
The Sound of a Silent Mutation - ScienceNOW
3 of 3
http://news.sciencemag.org/sciencenow/2006/12/22-02.html
5/9/10 9:59 AM