Repetitive amino acid sequence

  • Thread starter Thread starter reminiscent
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Acid Sequence
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the implications of repetitive amino acid sequences in proteins, particularly in the context of bioethics and potential health impacts. Participants explore assumptions related to these sequences and suggest ways to investigate them further, including references to specific diseases and genetic mechanisms.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Homework-related

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants inquire about assumptions related to proteins with repetitive regions and suggest testing a null hypothesis.
  • There are mentions of studies indicating advantages to repeated amino acid sequences, though specifics are not detailed.
  • One participant notes the complexity of protein structures and the implications of amino acid interactions, highlighting that repeats can vary in length and type.
  • A participant references Huntington's disease as an example of a condition related to amino acid repeats, discussing the genetic mechanisms involved and their bioethical implications.
  • Another participant emphasizes the importance of understanding tandem repeats in DNA, which may not directly affect proteins but have significant implications in genetics and forensics.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying degrees of understanding and knowledge about the topic, with some providing specific examples while others seek clarification. There is no clear consensus on the implications of repetitive sequences or the best approaches to investigate them.

Contextual Notes

Participants mention the need for reliable sources and specific studies, indicating that there may be gaps in knowledge or understanding regarding the implications of repetitive amino acid sequences.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be useful for students in bioethics or related fields, as well as individuals interested in the genetic implications of protein structures and their relevance to health and disease.

reminiscent
Messages
131
Reaction score
2
If a protein contains a repetitive region, what might be assumed, and what should be done next to test the null hypothesis?

Can anyone answer this with a reliable source they find?
 
Biology news on Phys.org
reminiscent said:
If a protein contains a repetitive region, what might be assumed, and what should be done next to test the null hypothesis?

Can anyone answer this with a reliable source they find?
When I Google your post, I get some pretty instructive hits. BTW, is this question for schoolwork?
 
berkeman said:
When I Google your post, I get some pretty instructive hits. BTW, is this question for schoolwork?
Yes, it's for a bioethics type of class. What did you Google specifically? I found a study that was conducted that pointed out there was just advantages to repeated amino acid sequences...
 
reminiscent said:
Yes, it's for a bioethics type of class. What did you Google specifically? I found a study that was conducted that pointed out there was just advantages to repeated amino acid sequences...
I copied your whole first sentence, and got a few hits that looked like they addressed your question.
 
Sounds like you might not have had biochemistry.

Proteins are complex with a complex structure that is often analyzed by looking at the interactions between the string of amino acids that make them up.
The interactions can be between amino acids close together or far apart in the string.
Repeats could be of single amino acids or sequences of various lengths.

Depending on the details there are many possible implications.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: berkeman
berkeman said:
I copied your whole first sentence, and got a few hits that looked like they addressed your question.
The hits I see do not pertain to the question as whole.
 
BillTre said:
Sounds like you might not have had biochemistry.

Proteins are complex with a complex structure that is often analyzed by looking at the interactions between the string of amino acids that make them up.
The interactions can be between amino acids close together or far apart in the string.
Repeats could be of single amino acids or sequences of various lengths.

Depending on the details there are many possible implications.

I did take a first semester Biochemistry course, but we never talked about what happens when amino acid sequences repeat. The question that I initially asked is really all that was asked in the homework I am doing for my Chemical Information System/Bioethics course.
 
Well reliable, never mind slightly weird way of putting the question, and having considerable bioethic aspects is to start with this article on Huntington's disease aka Huntington's Chorea https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huntington's_disease#Genetic_mutation There are other diseases of similar causation, but this is the most common and most researched.

When it arises ex novo it is due to the replication machinery having made as some kind of a slip and duplicating a triplet. One or more copies of one amino acid are inserted into the sequence. Unfortunately once this has happened it is more likely to happen again. That is why you see this complex inheritance at the phenotypic level, with effects worsening down generations.

Maybe it is not too trivial to say at the start that if you find it, it means that having it is compatible with life, though not good health. The disease's relatively late onset, opposite too many other genetic diseases, is relevant to bioethics.

Note that this example is a single amino acid residue repeat. (I don't know whether there are examples of longer repeats that theoretically should exist - they are less likely to give functional proteins.)

A key word to use in searches is 'tandem repeats'.

You will certainly need for bioethics to be pretty conversant with tandem repeats that happen in DNA outside coding regions, so not affecting any proteins or phenotype. These are of variable length which has made them very useful, among other things, associating the DNA to individuals for forensic purposes, and also ancestry tracing. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variable_number_tandem_repeat

If you have any conceptual difficulties in your further reading come back and hopefully someone here can help you.
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: jim mcnamara

Similar threads

  • · Replies 15 ·
Replies
15
Views
4K
Replies
4
Views
3K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
3K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
5K
  • · Replies 1 ·
Replies
1
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
2K
  • · Replies 18 ·
Replies
18
Views
10K
  • · Replies 31 ·
2
Replies
31
Views
7K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
12
Views
5K