Literature DB >> 15371528

A general tendency for conservation of protein length across eukaryotic kingdoms.

Daryi Wang1, Mufen Hsieh, Wen-Hsiung Li.   

Abstract

Protein elongation can occur in many ways, such as domain duplication or insertion and as recruitment of a transposable element fragment into the coding region, and it is believed to be a general tendency in protein evolution. Indeed, a previous study showed that yeast proteins are, on average, longer than their orthologs in bacteria, and in this study, we found that proteins in yeast, nematode, Drosophila, human, and Arabidopsis are, on average, longer than their orthologs in Escherichia coli. Surprisingly, however, we found conservation of protein sequence length across eukaryotic kingdoms. We collected 1,252 orthologous proteins from yeast, nematode, Drosophila, human, and Arabidopsis and found that the total length of these proteins is very similar among the five species and that there is no general tendency for a protein to increase or decrease in length. Furthermore, although paralogous proteins tend to undergo more sequence-length changes, there is also no general tendency for length increase. However, proteins that are commonly shared by Drosophila and human but not by yeast are, on average, substantially longer than proteins that are shared by yeast, Drosophila, and human. This is a puzzle that begs for an answer.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15371528     DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msh263

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  12 in total

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8.  Protein structure and evolution: are they constrained globally by a principle derived from information theory?

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9.  Genome-wide analyses and functional classification of proline repeat-rich proteins: potential role of eIF5A in eukaryotic evolution.

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