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Kinase Mutations in Human Disease: Interpreting Genotype-phenotype Relationships

Authors :
Lahiry, Piya
Torkamani, Ali
Schork, Nicholas J.
Hegele, Robert A.
Lahiry, Piya
Torkamani, Ali
Schork, Nicholas J.
Hegele, Robert A.
Source :
Robarts Vascular Research Publications
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Protein kinases are one of the largest families of evolutionarily related proteins and comprise one of the most abundant gene families in humans. Here we survey kinase gene mutations from the perspective of human disease phenotypes and further analyse the structural features of mutant kinases, including mutational hotspots. Our evaluation of the genotype-phenotype relationship across 915 human kinase mutations - that underlie 67 single-gene diseases, mainly inherited developmental and metabolic disorders and also certain cancers - enhances our understanding of the role of kinases in development, kinase dysfunction in pathogenesis and kinases as potential targets for therapy.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Robarts Vascular Research Publications
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn688646051
Document Type :
Electronic Resource