Title: A Study of Cystic Fibrosis Using WebBased Tools
1A Study of Cystic Fibrosis Using WebBased Tools
- Anuradha Datta Murphy
- Graduate Student Dept. of Molecular and
Integrative Physiology - University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
2Introduction
- We will use several medical and computational
biology web sites to obtain information on cystic
fibrosis an inherited respiratory disorder. - Outline of presentation
- What is cystic fibrosis CF?
- Gather information on cause and symptoms of CF
from medical web sites - Search for cystic fibrosis transmembrane
receptor CFTR protein locate CFcausing
mutation view CFTR structure using webbased
tools - Obtain information on other inherited disorders
of interest
3What is cystic fibrosis?
- Cystic fibrosis CF is an inherited genetic
disease that affect cells producing sweat
saliva mucus and digestive fluids. Normally
thin and slippery in CF patients these
secretions are sticky and block tubes and
passageways. Most CF patients die of bacterial
infections resulting from blocked airways in the
lungs. - Most children with CF have frequent coughing
wheezing and respiratory infections.
4Symptoms of CF contd.
- CF also affects the pancreas liver and
intestines leading to poor absorption of
nutrients and poor weight gain. CF patients have
salt crystal formation on their skin when they
sweat excessively. - CFshow available at http//www.healthcentr
al.com/library/April_03/flash_content/hcplay.asp?i
d110
5What causes CF?
- A mutation in the gene coding for the CFTR
cystic fibrosis transmembrane receptor protein
causes CF. - CF is caused when a child inherits two copies of
this defective mutated gene one from each
parent. - The CFTR protein is a Cl channel located on the
plasma membrane of epithelial cells of the lungs
pancreas sweat glands and other tissues. - In nonCF individuals Cl transport from the
cell is increased in the presence of ATP. In CF
patients this transport malfunctions causing
salt and water imbalance in and around the cell.
6The CFTR protein
- A single mutation in the CFTR gene results in
cystic fibrosis. - This mutation involves deletion of three
basepairs of DNA resulting in deletion of a
phenylalanine residue deltaF508 mutation from
a normal wild type CFTR sequence. - Theory deletion of Phe508 prevents the CFTR
protein from being properly delivered to the
plasma membrane thus causing Cl transport
malfunction.
7Properties of the CFTR protein
- The CFTR gene is located on chromosome 7 in the
human genome - This protein is made up of 1480 amino acids and
contains two domains 1 membrane association
and 2 ATPbinding - In CF patients deletion of Phe 508 causes
defective Cl transport.
8Locating and viewing the CFTR protein
- In the Biology Student Workbench search for the
CFTR protein using the following - search words cystic fibrosis homo sapiens
- search database NonRedundant protein sequence
database - tool Ndjinn
- Select SDSCNR315424 Cystic Fibrosis
Transmembrane Conductance Regulator import
sequence. - View sequence note accession number P13569.
Use other tools on BSW to learn about CF.
9Using the NCBI web site
- The National Center for Biotechnology Center is
available at the following url
http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov - Many computational biology tools are available
here including PubMed a database of biological
literature Entrez a search engine for
information on protein and nucleotide sequences
across databases BLAST alignment search tool
for protein and nucleotide sequences OMIM
Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man a directory
of human genes and genetic disorders and Cn3D
structure viewer.
10Study of CFTR using tools on NCBI
- In the NCBI home page search Entrez for cystic
fibrosis select Entrez type human cystic
fibrosis in the Search window click on Go. - In the results page note that our keyword search
has yielded hits on multiple databases contained
within NCBI. - Since CF is an inherited genetic disorder click
on OMIM to view results within the Online
Mendelian Inheritance in Man database. - In the OMIM hits list page click on the top hit
602421.
11Using OMIM
- Note the exhaustive information on CF available
in OMIM including cause and symptoms of the
disease molecular basis summary of literature
on CFTR mutation research study of other related
diseases generated by mutations on CFTR etc. - Click on Gene map locus 7q31.2 near the top of
the page. This gives the CFTR gene location on
the human genome. Click on Location in the
following page to get more detailed information
including a figure of human chromosome 7 and
other genes located in the vicinity.
12Using OMIM
- Return to the OMIM results page. Scroll down the
page to locate literature on F508 deletion you
can click on Edit in the toolbar header click
on Find on This Page and type delF508.
Research indicates that this deletion causes CF.
Click on 602421.0001. This is the mutated CFTR
gene causing CF. In the displayed page there is
more literature on CFTR mutation research.
13Using NCBI tools
- Return to the Entrez results page. Click on
Protein to examine the CFTR protein sequence.
In the hits page click on P13569. - Note presence of a phenylalanine residue F at
position 508 in the CFTR sequence. There is also
detailed information on various CFTR sequence
mutations and their results.
14Using Cn3D structure viewer
- Return to the Entrez results page. Click on
Structure. - Note presence of multiple CFTR structures based
on Phe508 mutation. - Click on 1CKZ view structure of CFTR segment
affected by Phe508 mutation using Cn3D. - In the MMDB Structure Summary page click on
View 3D Structure button. - Click on amino acid residues below to observe
location on structure. Note absence of F
residue.
15Using NCBI tools
- Return to the OMIM page.
- On the left column click on Search Morbid Map
- In the Search for window type in keywords for
any inherited disease of interest ex. sickle
cell anemia muscular dystrophy diabetes etc. - Locate the affected gene on the human genome
view location on the chromosome view structure
of protein if available using Cn3D and read up
on literature of research both clinical trials
and gene mutations all using tools on NCBI
16Closing Notes
- For more information on CF symptoms and
treatment see - http//www.merck.com/mrkshared/CVMHighLight?file/
mrkshared/mmanual_home2/sec04/ch053/ch053a.jsp3Fr
egion3Dmerckcomwordcysticwordfibrosisdomain
www.merck.comhl_anchor - http//www.healthcentral.com/library/libraryconten
t.cfm?id222 - http//www.healthcentral.com/library/libraryconten
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