In silico analysis of the human titin protein (Immunoglobulin-like, fibronectin type III, and Protein kinase domains) as a potential forensic marker for postmortem interval (PMI) estimation
Gill, M. U.; Akhtar, M.
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Due to the limited availability of reliable and well-validated molecular markers, the determination of postmortem interval (PMI) is still a major obstacle for forensic investigators to resolve a case. The largest human protein, known as titin, has never undergone at domain level examination of postmortem degradation patterns. This study focused on the In-silico analysis of the Immunoglobulin-like, fibronectin-type III, and Protein kinase domains of human titin to assess their potential utility in PMI estimation. Sequence data for the studied domains were retrieved from UniProt, 2D & 3D models were generated by PSIPRED and SWISS-MODEL, respectively, followed by physicochemical properties, solubility assessment, and structural comparison. This study revealed that the Ig-like domain is the most stable, followed by the Fn-III and Protein kinase domains. These findings indicate that Titin domains may degrade at different rates in the postmortem period. This study introduces the first computational basis for considering Titin as a multi-domain candidate biomarker for PMI estimation, laying the groundwork for upcoming laboratory validation.
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