Literature DB >> 28301769

Reconstructing Ancient Proteins to Understand the Causes of Structure and Function.

Georg K A Hochberg1, Joseph W Thornton2,3.   

Abstract

A central goal in biochemistry is to explain the causes of protein sequence, structure, and function. Mainstream approaches seek to rationalize sequence and structure in terms of their effects on function and to identify function's underlying determinants by comparing related proteins to each other. Although productive, both strategies suffer from intrinsic limitations that have left important aspects of many proteins unexplained. These limits can be overcome by reconstructing ancient proteins, experimentally characterizing their properties, and retracing their evolution through time. This approach has proven to be a powerful means for discovering how historical changes in sequence produced the functions, structures, and other physical/chemical characteristics of modern proteins. It has also illuminated whether protein features evolved because of functional optimization, historical constraint, or blind chance. Here we review recent studies employing ancestral protein reconstruction and show how they have produced new knowledge not only of molecular evolutionary processes but also of the underlying determinants of modern proteins' physical, chemical, and biological properties.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ancestral reconstruction; epistasis; evolutionary biochemistry; historical contingency; vertical analysis

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28301769      PMCID: PMC6141191          DOI: 10.1146/annurev-biophys-070816-033631

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Biophys        ISSN: 1936-122X            Impact factor:   12.981


  77 in total

1.  Evolutionary rate heterogeneity in proteins with long disordered regions.

Authors:  Celeste J Brown; Sachiko Takayama; Andrew M Campen; Pam Vise; Thomas W Marshall; Christopher J Oldfield; Christopher J Williams; A Keith Dunker
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2002-07       Impact factor: 2.395

2.  Attempts to convert chymotrypsin to trypsin.

Authors:  I Venekei; L Szilágyi; L Gráf; W J Rutter
Journal:  FEBS Lett       Date:  1996-01-29       Impact factor: 4.124

Review 3.  Evolutionary divergence of substrate specificity within the chymotrypsin-like serine protease fold.

Authors:  J J Perona; C S Craik
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  1997-11-28       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 4.  Structure, dynamics, assembly, and evolution of protein complexes.

Authors:  Joseph A Marsh; Sarah A Teichmann
Journal:  Annu Rev Biochem       Date:  2014-12-08       Impact factor: 23.643

5.  A hinge migration mechanism unlocks the evolution of green-to-red photoconversion in GFP-like proteins.

Authors:  Hanseong Kim; Taisong Zou; Chintan Modi; Katerina Dörner; Timothy J Grunkemeyer; Liqing Chen; Raimund Fromme; Mikhail V Matz; S Banu Ozkan; Rebekka M Wachter
Journal:  Structure       Date:  2015-01-06       Impact factor: 5.006

6.  Experimental test and refutation of a classic case of molecular adaptation in Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  Mohammad A Siddiq; David W Loehlin; Kristi L Montooth; Joseph W Thornton
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2017-01-13       Impact factor: 15.460

Review 7.  Enzyme (re)design: lessons from natural evolution and computation.

Authors:  John A Gerlt; Patricia C Babbitt
Journal:  Curr Opin Chem Biol       Date:  2009-02-23       Impact factor: 8.822

8.  Converting trypsin to chymotrypsin: ground-state binding does not determine substrate specificity.

Authors:  L Hedstrom; S Farr-Jones; C A Kettner; W J Rutter
Journal:  Biochemistry       Date:  1994-07-26       Impact factor: 3.162

9.  Thermodynamic system drift in protein evolution.

Authors:  Kathryn M Hart; Michael J Harms; Bryan H Schmidt; Carolyn Elya; Joseph W Thornton; Susan Marqusee
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2014-11-11       Impact factor: 8.029

10.  Comparing models of evolution for ordered and disordered proteins.

Authors:  Celeste J Brown; Audra K Johnson; Gary W Daughdrill
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2009-11-18       Impact factor: 16.240

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  46 in total

1.  Pervasive contingency and entrenchment in a billion years of Hsp90 evolution.

Authors:  Tyler N Starr; Julia M Flynn; Parul Mishra; Daniel N A Bolon; Joseph W Thornton
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-04-06       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Evolution of (p)ppGpp-HPRT regulation through diversification of an allosteric oligomeric interaction.

Authors:  Brent W Anderson; Kuanqing Liu; Christine Wolak; Katarzyna Dubiel; Fukang She; Kenneth A Satyshur; James L Keck; Jue D Wang
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2019-09-25       Impact factor: 8.140

3.  Ancestral-sequence reconstruction unveils the structural basis of function in mammalian FMOs.

Authors:  Callum R Nicoll; Gautier Bailleul; Filippo Fiorentini; María Laura Mascotti; Marco W Fraaije; Andrea Mattevi
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2019-12-23       Impact factor: 15.369

4.  Analysis of allosteric communication in a multienzyme complex by ancestral sequence reconstruction.

Authors:  Michael Schupfner; Kristina Straub; Florian Busch; Rainer Merkl; Reinhard Sterner
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-12-23       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Biophysical Spandrels form a Hot-Spot for Kosmotropic Mutations in Bacteriophage Thermal Adaptation.

Authors:  A Carl Whittington; Darin R Rokyta
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2018-12-18       Impact factor: 2.395

Review 6.  Evolution of protein specificity: insights from ancestral protein reconstruction.

Authors:  Mohammad A Siddiq; Georg Ka Hochberg; Joseph W Thornton
Journal:  Curr Opin Struct Biol       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 6.809

7.  FireProtASR: A Web Server for Fully Automated Ancestral Sequence Reconstruction.

Authors:  Milos Musil; Rayyan Tariq Khan; Andy Beier; Jan Stourac; Hannes Konegger; Jiri Damborsky; David Bednar
Journal:  Brief Bioinform       Date:  2021-07-20       Impact factor: 11.622

Review 8.  A global analysis of function and conservation of catalytic residues in enzymes.

Authors:  António J M Ribeiro; Jonathan D Tyzack; Neera Borkakoti; Gemma L Holliday; Janet M Thornton
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2019-12-03       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 9.  Understanding molecular mechanisms in cell signaling through natural and artificial sequence variation.

Authors:  Neel H Shah; John Kuriyan
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2018-12-31       Impact factor: 15.369

10.  The use of consensus sequence information to engineer stability and activity in proteins.

Authors:  Matt Sternke; Katherine W Tripp; Doug Barrick
Journal:  Methods Enzymol       Date:  2020-07-17       Impact factor: 1.600

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