Literature DB >> 12949083

Evolution of amino acid metabolism inferred through cladistic analysis.

Chomin Cunchillos1, Guillaume Lecointre.   

Abstract

Because free amino acids were most probably available in primitive abiotic environments, their metabolism is likely to have provided some of the very first metabolic pathways of life. What were the first enzymatic reactions to emerge? A cladistic analysis of metabolic pathways of the 16 aliphatic amino acids and 2 portions of the Krebs cycle was performed using four criteria of homology. The analysis is not based on sequence comparisons but, rather, on coding similarities in enzyme properties. The properties used are shared specific enzymatic activity, shared enzymatic function without substrate specificity, shared coenzymes, and shared functional family. The tree shows that the earliest pathways to emerge are not portions of the Krebs cycle but metabolisms of aspartate, asparagine, glutamate, and glutamine. The views of Horowitz (Horowitz, N. H. (1945) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 31, 153-157) and Cordón (Cordón, F. (1990) Tratado Evolucionista de Biologia, Aguilar, Madrid, Spain), according to which the upstream reactions in the catabolic pathways and the downstream reactions in the anabolic pathways are the earliest in evolution, are globally corroborated; however, with some exceptions. These are due to later opportunistic connections of pathways (actually already suggested by these authors). Earliest enzymatic functions are mostly catabolic; they were deaminations, transaminations, and decarboxylations. From the consensus tree we extracted four time spans for amino acid metabolism development. For some amino acids catabolism and biosynthesis occurred at the same time (Asp, Glu, Lys, Leu, Ala, Val, Ile, Pro, Arg). For others ultimate reactions that use amino acids as a substrate or as a product are distinct in time, with catabolism preceding anabolism for Asn, Gln, and Cys and anabolism preceding catabolism for Ser, Met, and Thr. Cladistic analysis of the structure of biochemical pathways makes hypotheses in biochemical evolution explicit and parsimonious.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12949083     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M213028200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  3 in total

1.  Origins of specificity and promiscuity in metabolic networks.

Authors:  Pablo Carbonell; Guillaume Lecointre; Jean-Loup Faulon
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2011-11-03       Impact factor: 5.157

2.  Molecular characterization of the immune system: emergence of proteins, processes, and domains.

Authors:  Csaba Ortutay; Markku Siermala; Mauno Vihinen
Journal:  Immunogenetics       Date:  2007-02-09       Impact factor: 2.846

3.  Categorizing ideas about trees: a tree of trees.

Authors:  Marie Fisler; Guillaume Lecointre
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-07       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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