Evolutionary dynamics of human autoimmune disease genes and malfunctioned immunological genes

One of the main issues of molecular evolution is to divulge the principles in dictating the evolutionary rate differences among various gene classes. Immunological genes have received considerable attention in evolutionary biology as candidates for local adaptation and for studying functionally important polymorphisms. The normal structure and function of immunological genes will be distorted when they experience mutations leading to immunological dysfunctions. Here, we examined the fundamental differences between the genes which on mutation give rise to autoimmune or other immune system related diseases and the immunological genes that do not cause any disease phenotypes. Although the disease genes examined are analogous to non-disease genes in product, expression, function, and pathway affiliation, a statistically significant decrease in evolutionary rate has been found in autoimmune disease genes relative to all other immune related diseases and non-disease genes. Possible ways of accumulation of mutation in the three steps of the central dogma (DNA-mRNA-Protein) have been studied to trace the mutational effects predisposed to disease consequence and acquiring higher selection pressure. Principal Component Analysis and Multivariate Regression Analysis have established the predominant role of single nucleotide polymorphisms in guiding the evolutionary rate of immunological disease and non-disease genes followed by m-RNA abundance, paralogs number, fraction of phosphorylation residue, alternatively spliced exon, protein residue burial and protein disorder. Our study provides an empirical insight into the etiology of autoimmune disease genes and other immunological diseases. The immediate utility of our study is to help in disease gene identification and may also help in medicinal improvement of immune related disease.


Background
The knowledge gleaned from several in silico studies has facilitated in understanding the variability of evolutionary patterns in gene classes that can illuminate their inherent characteristics. In particular, studies on the functional and evolutionary attributes of human immune system have attained a major focus since it is an orchestra of various defense mechanisms whereby human body maintains functional and organizational integrity against foreign encroachment. The evolutionary history of insects, chicken and mammals indicates that the majority of immune response genes are subjected to positive selection than remainder of the genes [1][2][3]. Immune response genes are also found to exhibit rapid gene turn over i.e. gene gain and loss [4]. Contextually, it has been proposed that probability of disease predisposition is higher in the genes with high rates of non synonymous mutations [5]. Diseases caused by abnormal or absences of immunologic mechanisms are thus very much common. According to disease mechanism, immune system linked disease genes are generally categorized into two broad classes (i) Immunodeficiencydysregulation of the immune system in eliminating microbial antigens resulting in chronic immunologic inactivation predisposed to immunologic disorder such as AIDS, DiGeorge syndrome, Chronic granulomatous disease, Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome, Hypersensitivity etc [6]. (ii) Autoimmunity-mistakenly immune system launches attacks on its own tissue by confusing itself as a foreign invader, leading to autoimmune disorder e.g. Graves disease, Rheumatoid arthritis, Multiple sclerosis, Goodpasture's syndrome etc [6]. Till date various analyses with autoimmune diseases have attempted to figure out their novel characteristics and possible mechanisms [7][8][9][10]. Recently, it has been hypothesized that some evolutionarily conserved proteins, present in pathogenic, commensal organisms and their hosts, provide the stimulus that initiates autoimmune disease in susceptible individuals [9]. A possible mechanism of autoantigen formation was thought to be instigated by increased non-canonical splicing that renders untolerized epitopes on antigen [10]. Although disorders caused by dysregulation of immune system have been studied in separate disease class, unique features of that entire disease genes class are still uncharacterized.
Recently, more extensive focus has been concentrated to scrutinize the disease genes for their unique characteristics that distinguish them from the remainder of the genome [11][12][13]. The growing incidence of autoimmune and several immunological diseases have prompted us to delve into the genic or proteomic features which induce the disease causing mutation on host defense genes. Evaluating the properties of functional immunological genes, malfunctioned immunological genes and autoimmune disease genes in the evolutionary framework we postulate that the autoimmune disease genes are under the strongest purifying selection among the three classes. We exemplified the underlying reasons by assessing the mutational effect at DNA-mRNA-protein levels. The comprehensive cataloguing and characterization of genes from evolutionary perspective may provide the basis for determining how nucleotide substitution impacts biological function and instigate common human diseases. Identification of the various features that are responsible to distinguish between several immunological disease and non-disease genes may help to identify the probable biochemical basis for the disease incidence. Our work may be extended in future in the form of refining the specialized features of functional and disease causing immunological genes.

Evolutionary Dynamics of Immune Related Disease and Non-disease Genes
The available resources of immunological disease genes facilitate us to investigate the evolutionary pressure acting on the autoimmune disease genes (AD) and other classes of disease genes resulting from malfunctioning immunological genes (ID) with respect to the immunological genes (IG) without known association to disease. Our result depicts a significant [P value = 7 × 10 -3 (AD vs ID); 1 × 10 -3 (ID vs IG); 4.6 × 10 -2 (AD vs IG)] gradual increase in the ratio of non-synonymous to synonymous substitutions (ω) [AD (mean ω = 0.336); ID (mean ω = 0.344); IG (mean ω = 0.446)]. Such evolutionary dynamics of disease and non-disease genes linked to immunological genes is a bit surprising because disease genes intuitively experience more mutational changes than non-disease genes, yet they are unable to escape the evolutionary pressure. It is obvious that mutation or variation will occur either in gene or m-RNA or protein level or in all the three levels to confer disease phenotypes. We intend to investigate in which level the mutation persuade the persistence of selection pressure.

Effects of Gene level variations
The first wave of information from the human genome analysis has revealed that single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) is the major resource of genetic and phenotypic variations in human. Scanning for the signatures of positive selection in human population suggests that SNPs in protein coding regions show regional evidence of less intense purifying selection [14,15]. Investigating the impact of SNPs in the coding region of above gene classes exemplified that accumulation of non-synonymous SNPs is significantly higher (Z score = 2.37, confidence level = 95%) in case of the AD (78.36%) compared to the ID (73.04%) genes. Moreover, IG genes are themselves less prone to non-synonymous substitutions (69.05%) than both classes of disease genes [AD Vs IG (Z score = 5.0125 confidence level = 95%); ID Vs IG (Z score = 2.011 confidence level = 95%)]. This observation clearly depicts that the most conserved group of genes is indeed the most sensitive ones to variation. Secondly, the shuffling of genes brought about by genetic recombination is a major engine of genetic variation. Recombination rate (RR) has been found to have a positive correlation with DNA diversity in many organisms, both in animals [16][17][18] and in plants [19]. Thus, accumulation of higher amount of SNPs was expected to initiate the higher RR for AD compared to ID and IG and the result was also in accordance to the expectation (average RR (cM/Mb) for AD = 0.051, ID = 0.035, IG = 0.0023; each value is significant at least at P<0.05 level in Mann-Whitney test). Though the mutagenic nature of recombination rate may reflect the possibility of higher non-synonymous substitutions, the prevalence of Hill-Robertson interference in the genomic regions with higher RR have been proposed to increase the efficacy of purifying selection [20,21]. Moreover, a positive association has been asserted between RR and gene expression level which also explains the lower evolutionary rate in regions with higher recombination frequencies [22]. Analyzing microarray expression data we also observed that on average the AD genes tend to be more highly expressed than the other two classes of genes (average expression for AD = 238.266; ID = 175.138; IG = 128.497; each value is significant at least at P<0.05 level in Mann-Whitney test). In addition to that, RR has long been thought to be one of the principal forces behind the gene duplication frequency [23,24]. Calculating the paralogs number in three groups of genes emphasized that the AD genes acquired a large number of duplicates compared to ID and IG genes (Average paralogs per genes for AD = 10.006; ID = 8.61, IG = 6.32; each value was significant at least at P<0.05 level in Mann-Whitney test). Higher duplicability may enforce the slower evolutionary rate on AD genes in contrast to other two classes since duplicated genes encounter more purifying selection than singletons even though shortly after the duplication, they experience a considerable relaxation of selection pressure [25]. From this it can be inferred that the SNPs and recombination rate collectively incite recurrent gene duplication (Spearman's ρ SNP, RR = 0.120, P = 1.0 × 10 -3 ; Spearman's ρ RR, paralogs number = 0.060, P = 1.0 × 10 -3 ) and elicit the selection pressure on disease genes.
With the advent of genome scanning technology it has uncovered that the human genome becomes structurally dynamic due to the presence of thousands of heritable copy of mutation and are equally important as SNPs [26]. It was reported that reduced purifying selection has been acting upon copy number variants (CNVs) region [27]. Looking for the association of CNVs with immunological disease and non-disease genes we noticed that the nondisease immunological genes are significantly (Z-value = 1.96 at 95% confidence level) more prone (53.98% of total immunological genes) to suffer from CNVs compared to other immunological disease genes (49.72% of total other immunological disease genes) while the later group of disease genes (44.5% of total autoimmune disease genes) exhibit significantly (Z value = 1.99 at 95% confidence level) lesser CNVs than other immunological disease genes. These findings are also consistent with the notion that the CNV genes prefer to encode large numbers of secreted, olfactory, and immunity proteins rather than the genes harboring Mendelian disease [28]. Although the disease genes concerned in our study are inherited by both Mendelian and non-Mendelian fashion, we did not observe any opposite trend for accounting the non-Mendelian disease genes.

Effects of Transcript level Variations
Over the past decade, it has been postulated that alternative splicing (AS) is a critical post transcriptional event directing an enhancement of transcriptome and proteome diversity, particularly in higher organisms [29]. The frequent accumulation of non-synonymous mutations in alternatively spliced regions [30] initiates a faster rate of evolution in alternatively spliced exons than the constitutively spliced ones as evidenced from a comparison of orthologous human and mouse genes [31]. Investigation on the involvement of the three groups of genes in alternative splicing mechanism revealed that most of the IG genes favor alternative splicing to increase their proteomic diversity in contrast to AD and ID genes (Table 1). Accordingly, the profuse number of alternatively spliced exons are encompassed in IG genes compared to ID and AD genes (average alternatively spliced exons per gene in AD = 5.89, ID = 6.78, IG = 8.85; each value is significant at least at P<0.05 level in Mann-Whitney test). Such nature of IG is also biologically relevant since it was proposed that AS is crucial for a functional immune system as it offers the potency of high degree of diversity and the competence of individual cells to rapidly adapt and respond towards the changing environmental conditions [32,33].
Since, alternative splicing can bolster organism complexity by effectively increasing the proteome size, the m-RNA abundance would be higher for the immunological genes. However, we already noticed IG genes are lowly expressed. Accounting EST data, the trend remain exactly same i.e. the EST count/m-RNA abundance is lower for the IG (27.02) compared to ID (35.11) and AD (48.72) genes. Hence, we ask what drives the lower m-RNA abundance of AS rich immunological genes. In the recent year it has been clarified that up to one-third of human AS events create a premature termination codon (PTC) that would cause the resulting mRNA to be degraded by nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) [34,35] and it was also stated that a higher rate of mRNA decay can be considered as an indicator of the lower gene expressivity [36]. Analysis on the coupling of NMD to the AS linked genes shows that most of the alternatively spliced isoforms of IG undergo mRNA decay while the count is much lower for ID and AD genes ( Table 1).
Another implication of alternative splicing is to promote intrinsically disordered protein, thus enabling functional and regulatory diversity in human proteome [37,38]. Calculation of disorder residues in the three classes of proteins shows that the percentage of unstructured protein regions in IG, ID and AD genes are respectively 44.23%, 32.22% and 21.52% and the difference between each of the above values is significant at P < 0.05 (in Mann-Whitney test). The aberrant increase of disorderness in IG proteins again confirms the high flexibility of antigen binding sites in immunoglobulin to combat against an almost infinite diversity of physiological or synthetic antigens is predominantly rendered by intrinsically disordered regions of proteins [39]. Association with a large number of disorder residues of IG is also be an imperative reason for their faster evolutionary rate than AD and ID genes since in some protein families it has been demonstrated that the disordered regions evolve at a significantly faster rate than the ordered regions [40].

Role of SNPs on Transcript level Variations
In recent years there has been growing evidence for extensive natural variations like SNPs to be the major contributor of alternative splicing variation in humans [41]. Numerous disease-causing mutations within the consensus 5' splice site create a cryptic splice site that leads to defective mRNA and protein products [42,43]. In our study, we also noticed a greater association of 5' splice site SNPs (ss SNP) with AD genes compared to ID and IG (Table 1). This phenomenon indicates that SNPs impede the disease genes (AD, ID) to take part in alternative splicing by altering the splicing signals and their lower involvement with alternative splicing than IG genes may imposes much more evolutionary pressure on disease genes.

Effects of Protein level Variations
All proteins are potentially subjected to Post-translational Modifications (PMs) to accomplish many important roles in regulating the biological processes such as regulation of gene expression, activation/deactivation of enzymatic activity, protein stability or destruction, mediation of protein-protein interactions etc [44]. However, in some cases, PMs may be detrimental to protein functionality and may compromise the cellular functions in which they reside [45]. Among many of the modifications, post-translational phosphorylation is one of the most common protein modifications that occur in animal cells. Calculation of PMs sites revealed that the fraction of potential phosphorylation residues i.e serine, threonine, and cysteine to the total length of the protein is significantly (Mann-Whitney's P < 0.05 in each case) higher in case of AD genes (0.097) compared to ID (0.084) and IG (0.069) genes. This observation again emphasized the previous hypothesis that the abnormal frequency of PMs uncover cryptic epitopes or create some novel epitopes that may be not tolerated during T-cell selection and trigger the pathogenesis of autoimmune disorder [45]. Contextually, it has recently been discovered that an additional purifying selection are operated on the positions involved in phosphorylation as compared to their unmodified counterparts in the same protein [46]. Thus the higher enrichment of posttranslational phosphorylation site in AD genes may be considered as a potential reason for their lower evolutionary rate.
Furthermore, it is well established that buried residues in a protein are important determinants of protein stability while surface residues are involved in protein function [47]. Here we found that AD genes bury more residue on average compared to ID and IG genes (Figure 1). Since buried residues evolve at a slower rate [48], the higher level of residue burial in AD genes can be accounted for their lower sequence divergence and as well as a possible means of achieving greater stability.

Role of SNPs on Protein level Variations
Systematic approach to the analysis of SNPs indicated that SNPs resulting in deleterious amino acid changes predominantly affect the stability of the protein [49]. We then map the non-synonymous SNPs on protein buried region and quantify the hydrophobic, hydrophilic, amphipathic amino acid substitution frequency in each group of genes. The average amino acid exchange frequencies among hydrophobic, hydrophilic and amphipathic amino acids among AD, ID, IG genes for buried regions of proteins are diagrammatically represented in Figure 2. We noticed transition from hydrophilic to hydrophobic or amphipathic to hydrophobic residue is more frequently substituted in the buried regions of AD proteins compared to ID and IG proteins. Moreover, the hydrophobicity of buried region in AD genes has found to increase significantly after substitution with SNPs than ID genes while no change of hydrophobicity has   Figure 3). Thus, influence of SNPs in increasing the hydrophobicity in buried region of AD proteins may be responsible for evolutionary constraint for maintaining protein stability.

Relative Contribution of the Factors in Determining Evolutionary Rate Variation
Here, we noticed different probable factors in the three levels (DNA-m-RNA-Protein) that can explain evolutionary rate differences among AD, ID and IG genes. To assess the contribution of each variable, we compute Principal Component Analysis (PCA). The dominant eigen vectors (taken as equal to or greater than 1) that appear from this analysis can be interpreted as the most important contributors directing protein evolution [50]. PCA with gene level variables (SNPs, CNVs, RR, duplicability); m-RNA level variables (isoform number, alternatively spliced exon, m-RNA abundance, disorderness); protein level variables (phosphorylation, protein residue burial), which are the dominant factors, are represented in table 2. Multiple Regression Analysis was then performed to assess the contribution of each level variables determined in PCA in a single regression model from which we can identify the influence of all potential Figure 1 Distributions of buried and exposed residues among AD, ID and IG proteins. Error bar represents 5% standard error of data. predictor variables and at the same time can eliminate step by step those predictors that contribute least to the regression model. Regression analysis exhaustively confirmed that the SNPs (β= -3.725), is the most influential predictor of the evolutionary rate followed by the m-RNA abundance (β= -3.005), paralogs number (β= -2.036), fraction of phosphorylation residue (β = -2.091), alternatively spliced exon (β = 1.960), protein residue burial (β= -1.085) and protein disorder (β = 1.021).

Discussion
Recent years have witnessed rapid progress in elucidating the molecular causes of various diseases. Here we analyzed the evolutionary disparity between the functional and non-functional immune systems. We noticed that autoimmune disease genes are more conserved than other immunological disease genes and both sets of genes evolved significantly at a slower rate than immunological genes. Though the evolutionary rates differences among the gene groups are statistically significant, the difference of mean values between autoimmune and immunological disease genes is small. However, the differences of mean values among the groups turned out to be prominent when we analyzed non-synonymous and synonymous substitution rates separately (dn for autoimmune disease genes = 0.0079; immunological disease genes = 0.0091; immunological genes = 0.0118; Mann-Whitney's P = 1 × 10 -3 in each case and ds for autoimmune disease genes = 0.0232; immunological disease genes = 0.0254; immunological genes = 0.0291; Mann-Whitney's P < 0.05 in each case).
Significant differences in synonymous substitutions rates among the gene groups indicate the role of neutral substitutions in driving the evolutionary rate discrepancies among them. Now, the slower evolving disease linked immune genes raise a fundamental question why non disease immune genes evolve at a higher rate compared to disease related immune genes since it was previously documented by several studies that non-disease genes evolve at a slower rate than disease genes [51,52], though some controversial reports [11] are also present. To resolve this controversy, our previous study [12] exemplified that, monogenic diseases inherited by Mendelian fashion and polygenic disease genes inherited by non-Mendelian fashion are evolutionarily faster than housekeeping genes but monogenic disease genes show slower evolutionary rate than tissue specific genes. It is also noteworthy to mention that immune system genes show tissue-specific expression pattern [53] and both of our disease datasets mostly comprise monogenic disease genes (autoimmune disease genes dataset: 69% monogenic disorder, 31% polygenic disorder; other immunological disease genes dataset:61% monogenic disorder; 39% polygenic disorder). Herein, the differences in single nucleotide polymorphisms, copy number variations, recombination rate, duplicability, alternative splicing, disorderness, post-translational modification, and protein residue burial can explain the evolutionary disparity among the three groups of genes.
The evolutionary conservation of disease related immunological genes in spite of their higher association with non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms Hydrophobicity (Gravy Score) Figure 3 Differences in average hydrophobicity score between the three categories of genes before mutation (wild type) and after mutation (mutant type) with SNPs. P-value shows the significant level.
is an artifact of its beneficial impact on disease related genes ( Figure 4). Single nucleotide polymorphisms upregulate recombination rates which in turns increase the gene expression as well as paralogs number in disease genes. Duplication driven disease gene formation has also supported by a series of evidence in an earlier literature [54]. Previously, it was underscored that duplication and alternative splicing could not be operated simultaneously rather they hold a negative correlation with each other [55]. Since the disease genes achieved their proteome size through gene duplication, we observed a lower involvement with alternative splicing. Here also single nucleotide polymorphisms played a critical role in 5' splice site and create a cryptic splice site by altering the splicing signal. On the other hand the immunological genes follow the path of alternative splicing to enhance their diversity. However, the frequent link with alternative splicing could not generate higher m-RNA abundance of immunological genes due to "Regulated Unproductive Splicing and Translation" (RUST) mechanism [56] in which premature termination codon containing isoforms are targeted to nonsense mediated decay to regulate the transcript level of functional protein. Rather alternative splicing helps to impose a greater flexibility to bind with an enormous number of foreign particles without known structural analogy through increasing protein disorderness in immunological genes (Spearman's ρ disorderness, alternatively spliced exon = 0.134, P = 1 × 10 -3 ). Thus, we deciphered that the basic difference in the involvement of proteome expansion machinery put differential selective pressures on malfunctioning immune genes and the functional immune genes. Moreover, it is also observed in our search that autoimmune disease and other immunological disease genes are more prone to post-translational phosphorylation which may regarded as a possible reason for slower evolutionary rate. In protein structure level, the higher residue burial is observed in two types of disease genes compared to non-disease genes and the propensity of single nucleotide polymorphisms to substitute hydrophilic, amphipathic amino acid by hydrophobic amino acid in disease groups could be prompted as a reason of lower sequence divergence in autoimmune disease and other immunological disease genes than immunological genes. Conferring structural stability to the autoimmune disease genes also has a biological significance since incidence of autoimmunity sharply increases in the stable protein forms in the cell [57].
Podder and Ghosh BMC Evolutionary Biology 2012, 12:10 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/12/10 disease and immunological disease genes is in the order of single nucleotide polymorphisms > m-RNA abundance > paralogs number > phosphorylation residue > alternatively spliced exon > protein residue burial> protein disorder. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first extensive comparison of disease and non-disease related immunological genes from evolutionary perspective. This finding also shades light into the mutational spectrum acting on DNA-mRNA-protein level of the three classes of genes. Our study will surely enrich the knowledge of disease gene identification and may also help in medicinal improvement of autoimmune disease.

Immune Related Disease and Non-disease Genes Identification
Immune related disease genes mainly consist with Autoimmune disease, Immunoproliferative disease, Immunologic deficiency syndromes, hypersensitivity, Graft rejection, Purpura, thrombocytopenia, and Glomerulonephritis. There exists a clear demarcation between the basic disease mechanism of autoimmune disease and rest of the immune related disease genes. Thus immune related disease genes are broadly categorized into the two groupsautoimmune disease genes and other immunological disease genes. These two types of genes inherited by Mendelian and non-Mendelian fashion were downloaded from Biobase and Genetic Association Database [58] respectively. Autoimmune disease genes include Rheumatoid Arthritis, Diabetes Mellitus, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, Greves disease, Thyroiditis, Antiphospholipid Syndrom, Pemphigus, Polyendocrynopathis, Hemolytic anemia, Multiple Sclerosis etc. Then we have checked the functional description of the gene sets downloaded from Biobase and Genetic Association database. The link between the functional description and disease association was manually verified and the genes whose functional descriptions match with disease associations were considered in our study while the genes which are common in both autoimmune disease and other immunological diseases were excluded from our dataset. Since the main objective of our study is to find out the evolutionary disparity among the gene sets, we have chosen only those genes for which the information is available for their orthologs in Chimpanzee and their dn and ds values in Ensembl. Finally we have constructed the dataset with a total of 781 autoimmune disease genes and 679 other immunological disease genes (Additional file 1, Table S1). Immunological genes were obtained from ImmPort [59] and filtered with similar criteria. Finally we have acquired 2470 non-disease immunological genes by excluding the above disease genes list (Additional file 1, Table S1).

Orthologs and Paralogs Identification
The gene sequences, paralogs information, pair-wise non-synonymous substitution rates (dn) and synonymous substitution rates (ds) with Chimp (1:1) orthologs corresponding to both types of immunological disease genes as well as non-disease genes were retrieved from Ensembl [60].

Gene Expression Profile
The gene expression profile data was extracted from BioGPS dataset [61]. The signal intensities across 79 Figure 4 The schematic representation to illustrate synchronous effect of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms on recombination rate, hydrophobicity, paralogs number, alternative splicing. Bold arrows denote significant correlations, +ve for positive and -ve for negative while the dotted arrow indicates non-significant (NS) relationship between variables.
tissues were averaged and were considered as expression level for each gene represented by their corresponding probe id. mRNA abundance of the genes in our dataset was calculated using EST data obtained from DFCI Gene Indices. Gene expression level was estimated by calculating the number of occurrences of each gene among EST sequences from 179 cDNA libraries sampled with at least 10,000 ESTs [62]. Eliminating pathogenic and cancerous libraries, 41 libraries were kept and alignments were made between the coding sequences of the gene groups with the EST dataset using BLASTN program with a sequence matching criterion of 60% identity and 80% overlaps. The overall EST counts for each gene across 41 EST libraries represented their mRNA abundance.

Measurement of SNPs, CNVs, Recombination Rate
Non-synonymous SNPs and CNVs information were downloaded from Polydoms [63] and Database of Genomic Variants [64] respectively. Chromosome wise gene recombination rates were downloaded from Hapmap project [65]. The recombination rates of the progenitor genes were calculated using the formula ∑ρ i /l, where ρ i stands for recombination rate at a base position and l for the genic length corresponding to that gene [66].

Alternative Splicing and SNPs Effect
Data for alternatively spliced isoforms and exons for the genes in the dataset were downloaded from the Alternative Splicing Annotation Project [67]. Splice site SNPs information were collected from ssSNP Target [68]. Data for alternatively spliced isoforms that are coupled to mRNA degradation were fetched from AS-ALPS [69].

Prediction of Intrinsically Disorder Region, Hydrophobicity and Post-translational Phosphorylation
Disorder predictions were carried out using the program FoldIndex [70] implementing the prediction method of Uversky et al. [71]. Post translational phosphorylation in the disease and non-disease related immunological proteins were measured from NetPhos (2.0) [72]. Hydrophobicity values of proteins were retrieved from ProtParam [73]