Literature DB >> 14629040

Evolutionary landscapes for the acquisition of new ligand recognition by RNA aptamers.

Daniel M Held1, S Travis Greathouse, Amit Agrawal, Donald H Burke.   

Abstract

The evolution of ligand specificity underlies many important problems in biology, from the appearance of drug resistant pathogens to the re-engineering of substrate specificity in enzymes. In studying biomolecules, however, the contributions of macromolecular sequence to binding specificity can be obscured by other selection pressures critical to bioactivity. Evolution of ligand specificity in vitro--unconstrained by confounding biological factors--is addressed here using variants of three flavin-binding RNA aptamers. Mutagenized pools based on the three aptamers were combined and allowed to compete during in vitro selection for GMP-binding activity. The sequences of the resulting selection isolates were diverse, even though most were derived from the same flavin-binding parent. Individual GMP aptamers differed from the parental flavin aptamers by 7 to 26 mutations (20 to 57% overall change). Acquisition of GMP recognition coincided with the loss of FAD (flavin-adenine dinucleotide) recognition in all isolates, despite the absence of a counter-selection to remove FAD-binding RNAs. To examine more precisely the proximity of these two activities within a defined sequence space, the complete set of all intermediate sequences between an FAD-binding aptamer and a GMP-binding aptamer were synthesized and assayed for activity. For this set of sequences, we observe a portion of a neutral network for FAD-binding function separated from GMP-binding function by a distance of three mutations. Furthermore, enzymatic probing of these aptamers revealed gross structural remodeling of the RNA coincident with the switch in ligand recognition. The capacity for neutral drift along an FAD-binding network in such close approach to RNAs with GMP-binding activity illustrates the degree of phenotypic buffering available to a set of closely related RNA sequences--defined as the set's functional tolerance for point mutations--and supports neutral evolutionary theory by demonstrating the facility with which a new phenotype becomes accessible as that buffering threshold is crossed.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14629040     DOI: 10.1007/s00239-003-2481-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Evol        ISSN: 0022-2844            Impact factor:   2.395


  22 in total

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Authors:  N Lehman; M D Donne; M West; T G Dewey
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3.  The scene of a frozen accident.

Authors:  A D Ellington; M Khrapov; C A Shaw
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4.  The guanosine binding site of the Tetrahymena ribozyme.

Authors:  F Michel; M Hanna; R Green; D P Bartel; J W Szostak
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1989-11-23       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  RNAs with dual specificity and dual RNAs with similar specificity.

Authors:  G J Connell; M Yarus
Journal:  Science       Date:  1994-05-20       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  From sequences to shapes and back: a case study in RNA secondary structures.

Authors:  P Schuster; W Fontana; P F Stadler; I L Hofacker
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  1994-03-22       Impact factor: 5.349

7.  Emergence of a dual-catalytic RNA with metal-specific cleavage and ligase activities: the spandrels of RNA evolution.

Authors:  L F Landweber; I D Pokrovskaya
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1999-01-05       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  Continuity in evolution: on the nature of transitions.

Authors:  W Fontana; P Schuster
Journal:  Science       Date:  1998-05-29       Impact factor: 47.728

9.  Flavin recognition by an RNA aptamer targeted toward FAD.

Authors:  Manami Roychowdhury-Saha; Susan M Lato; Eric D Shank; Donald H Burke
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  2002-02-26       Impact factor: 3.162

10.  Molecular recognition in the FMN-RNA aptamer complex.

Authors:  P Fan; A K Suri; R Fiala; D Live; D J Patel
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  1996-05-10       Impact factor: 5.469

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  11 in total

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Journal:  Theory Biosci       Date:  2010-09-01       Impact factor: 1.919

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3.  Modular evolution and increase of functional complexity in replicating RNA molecules.

Authors:  Susanna C Manrubia; Carlos Briones
Journal:  RNA       Date:  2006-11-14       Impact factor: 4.942

4.  Comprehensive experimental fitness landscape and evolutionary network for small RNA.

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5.  Natural and artificial RNAs occupy the same restricted region of sequence space.

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Journal:  RNA       Date:  2009-12-23       Impact factor: 4.942

6.  Bacteriophage P22 antitermination boxB sequence requirements are complex and overlap with those of lambda.

Authors:  Alexis I Cocozaki; Ingrid R Ghattas; Colin A Smith
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2008-04-18       Impact factor: 3.490

7.  In vitro evolution of distinct self-cleaving ribozymes in diverse environments.

Authors:  Milena Popović; Palmer S Fliss; Mark A Ditzler
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2015-06-29       Impact factor: 16.971

Review 8.  Searching genomes for ribozymes and riboswitches.

Authors:  Christian Hammann; Eric Westhof
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 13.583

9.  FASTAptamer: A Bioinformatic Toolkit for High-throughput Sequence Analysis of Combinatorial Selections.

Authors:  Khalid K Alam; Jonathan L Chang; Donald H Burke
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10.  The Single-Stranded RNA Bacteriophage Qβ Adapts Rapidly to High Temperatures: An Evolution Experiment.

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Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2020-06-12       Impact factor: 5.048

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