User:Marcos Ngo/Sandbox 1

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Notability, the first 63 residues were not modeled within the structure of hNHTL1 which is due to disorder. This can be observed under a PONDR prediction.
Notability, the first 63 residues were not modeled within the structure of hNHTL1 which is due to disorder. This can be observed under a PONDR prediction.
[[Image:PONDR.jpg|438 × 271px|'''PONDR Disorder Prediction''']] <ref>https://www.pondr.com/</ref>
[[Image:PONDR.jpg|438 × 271px|'''PONDR Disorder Prediction''']] <ref>https://www.pondr.com/</ref>
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Additionally motifs are present on the extended N-terminus incuding a bipartite nuclear localization signal from resiude 28-52 and a basic and acidic amino acids from residues 23-42. <ref>https://www.uniprot.org/uniprotkb/P78549/entry</ref>
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== Disease ==
== Disease ==
When the base excision repair pathway is compromised, this leads to limitations in enzymes to repair damaged DNA. This turns into mutations throughout the genome, leading to the progression of cancer. NTHL1-Tumor Syndrome is a disease caused by variants affecting the gene, being diagnosed with the germline biallelic pathogenic variant, through molecular genetic testing renders the glycosylase inactive. When this is the case, one's cumulative lifetime risk of developing extracolonic cancer by age 60 is 45-78%. Oftentimes, this syndrome is characterized by an increased risk of colorectal cancer, breast cancer, and colorectal polyposis. Around 5% of colorectal cancers can be explained by germline mutations within a CRC predisposing gene. Exome sequencing has led to the identification of a homozygous nonsense mutation (c.268C>T encoding p.Q90*) in the base excision repair gene NTHL1 in three unrelated families.<ref>PMID:32239880</ref><ref>PMID:25938944</ref><ref>PMID:https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/NTH_HUMAN NTH_HUMAN</ref>
When the base excision repair pathway is compromised, this leads to limitations in enzymes to repair damaged DNA. This turns into mutations throughout the genome, leading to the progression of cancer. NTHL1-Tumor Syndrome is a disease caused by variants affecting the gene, being diagnosed with the germline biallelic pathogenic variant, through molecular genetic testing renders the glycosylase inactive. When this is the case, one's cumulative lifetime risk of developing extracolonic cancer by age 60 is 45-78%. Oftentimes, this syndrome is characterized by an increased risk of colorectal cancer, breast cancer, and colorectal polyposis. Around 5% of colorectal cancers can be explained by germline mutations within a CRC predisposing gene. Exome sequencing has led to the identification of a homozygous nonsense mutation (c.268C>T encoding p.Q90*) in the base excision repair gene NTHL1 in three unrelated families.<ref>PMID:32239880</ref><ref>PMID:25938944</ref><ref>PMID:https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/NTH_HUMAN NTH_HUMAN</ref>
A functional non-mutated version of hNTHL1 can additionally play a role in cancer cell survival. In triple-negative breast cancer, BCL11A, a protein, is frequently overexpressed. BCL11A is a transcription factor shown to stimulate hNTHL1 activity, enhancing base excision repair (BER) and enabling cancer cells to proliferate in high levels of oxidative DNA damage. Separately, Y-box binding protein-1 (YB-1) is overexpressed in tumor cells, and hNTHL1 can be activated through direct interaction with YB-1. This boosts its ability to process oxidized bases​. This YB–1–mediated stimulation of hNTHL1 causes resistance to cisplatin, a form of chemotherapy, allowing for cancer proliferation. <ref>PMID:36186110</ref><ref>PMID:18307537</ref>
A functional non-mutated version of hNTHL1 can additionally play a role in cancer cell survival. In triple-negative breast cancer, BCL11A, a protein, is frequently overexpressed. BCL11A is a transcription factor shown to stimulate hNTHL1 activity, enhancing base excision repair (BER) and enabling cancer cells to proliferate in high levels of oxidative DNA damage. Separately, Y-box binding protein-1 (YB-1) is overexpressed in tumor cells, and hNTHL1 can be activated through direct interaction with YB-1. This boosts its ability to process oxidized bases​. This YB–1–mediated stimulation of hNTHL1 causes resistance to cisplatin, a form of chemotherapy, allowing for cancer proliferation. <ref>PMID:36186110</ref><ref>PMID:18307537</ref>
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== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 19:05, 27 April 2025

Human NTHL1

PDB ID 7rds

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Marcos Ngo

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