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Computational searches for missing orthologs: the case of S100A12 in mice
Authors:Fuellen Georg  Nacken Wolfgang  Sorg Clemens  Kerkhoff Claus
Institution:Integrated Functional Genomics, IZKF, Department of Medicine, University of Münster, Münster, Germany. fuellen@uni-muenster.de
Abstract:The interaction of the Ca2+-binding protein S100A12 with RAGE (receptor of advanced glycation endproducts) has been considered as a novel proinflammatory axis, since blockage of RAGE/S100A12 ligation suppresses chronic cellular activation and tissue injury in mouse models. However, the existence of a murine S100A12 ortholog is unknown. Because experimental approaches failed to identify it, we started an analysis of gene locus evolution. Human S100A12 is localized in the S100 gene cluster between S100A8 and S100A9, which are neighbors in both mouse and human. Confirming identical gene order, we found a DNA region between the murine S100A8 and S100A9 genes that is 60.9% identical to a region of the human S100A12 gene, including the first exon. Instead of the second and third exon, we found homology to a region close to the human S100A9 locus. To exclude a murine S100A12 ortholog elsewhere in the genome, we used human S100A12 as query for TBlastN homology searches. The matches were either too short, or identity was too low, or they could clearly be identified as distinct S100 genes. Obviously, an S100A12 ortholog is neither present in mouse nor rat, indicating that S100A12 has been lost during rodent evolution, probably due to a deletion.
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