Literature DB >> 31058959

Limits to Compensatory Mutations: Insights from Temperature-Sensitive Alleles.

Katarzyna Tomala1, Piotr Zrebiec1, Daniel L Hartl2.   

Abstract

Previous experiments with temperature-sensitive mutants of the yeast enzyme orotidine 5'-phosphate decarboxylase (encoded in gene URA3) yielded the unexpected result that reversion occurs only through exact reversal of the original mutation (Jakubowska A, Korona R. 2009. Lack of evolutionary conservation at positions important for thermal stability in the yeast ODCase protein. Mol Biol Evol. 26(7):1431-1434.). We recreated a set of these mutations in which the codon had two nucleotide substitutions, making exact reversion much less likely. We screened these double mutants for reversion and obtained a number of compensatory mutations occurring at alternative sites in the molecule. None of these compensatory mutations fully restored protein performance. The mechanism of partial compensation is consistent with a model in which protein stabilization is additive, as the same secondary mutations can compensate different primary alternations. The distance between primary and compensatory residues precludes direct interaction between the sites. Instead, most of the compensatory mutants were clustered in proximity to the catalytic center. All of the second-site compensatory substitutions occurred at relatively conserved sites, and the amino acid replacements were to residues found at these sites in a multispecies alignment of the protein. Based on the estimated distribution of changes in Gibbs free energy among a large number of amino acid replacements, we estimate that, for most proteins, the probability that a second-site mutation would have a sufficiently large stabilizing effect to offset a temperature-sensitive mutation in the order of 10-4 or less. Hence compensation is likely to take place only for slightly destabilizing mutations because highly stabilizing mutations are exceeding rare.
© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ura3; additivity; compensatory mutations; epistasis; protein stability

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31058959      PMCID: PMC6735812          DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msz110

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


  37 in total

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Authors:  D C Rees; A D Robertson
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 6.725

2.  The coupon collector and the suppressor mutation: estimating the number of compensatory mutations by maximum likelihood.

Authors:  Art Poon; Bradley H Davis; Lin Chao
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2005-05-06       Impact factor: 4.562

Review 3.  Missense meanderings in sequence space: a biophysical view of protein evolution.

Authors:  Mark A DePristo; Daniel M Weinreich; Daniel L Hartl
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 53.242

4.  Robustness-epistasis link shapes the fitness landscape of a randomly drifting protein.

Authors:  Shimon Bershtein; Michal Segal; Roy Bekerman; Nobuhiko Tokuriki; Dan S Tawfik
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2006-11-19       Impact factor: 49.962

5.  Lack of evolutionary conservation at positions important for thermal stability in the yeast ODCase protein.

Authors:  Agata Jakubowska; Ryszard Korona
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2009-04-06       Impact factor: 16.240

6.  Mutational effects on stability are largely conserved during protein evolution.

Authors:  Orr Ashenberg; L Ian Gong; Jesse D Bloom
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-12-09       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Permissive secondary mutations enable the evolution of influenza oseltamivir resistance.

Authors:  Jesse D Bloom; Lizhi Ian Gong; David Baltimore
Journal:  Science       Date:  2010-06-04       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Pervasive cryptic epistasis in molecular evolution.

Authors:  Mark Lunzer; G Brian Golding; Antony M Dean
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2010-10-21       Impact factor: 5.917

9.  Stability-Mediated Epistasis Restricts Accessible Mutational Pathways in the Functional Evolution of Avian Hemoglobin.

Authors:  Amit Kumar; Chandrasekhar Natarajan; Hideaki Moriyama; Christopher C Witt; Roy E Weber; Angela Fago; Jay F Storz
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2017-05-01       Impact factor: 16.240

10.  Historical contingency and its biophysical basis in glucocorticoid receptor evolution.

Authors:  Michael J Harms; Joseph W Thornton
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-06-15       Impact factor: 49.962

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