| Literature DB >> 36060688 |
Natalie Krahn1, Dieter Söll1,2, Oscar Vargas-Rodriguez1.
Abstract
Intricate evolutionary events enabled the emergence of the full set of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (aaRS) families that define the genetic code. The diversification of aaRSs has continued in organisms from all domains of life, yielding aaRSs with unique characteristics as well as aaRS-like proteins with innovative functions outside translation. Recent bioinformatic analyses have revealed the extensive occurrence and phylogenetic diversity of aaRS gene duplication involving every synthetase family. However, only a fraction of these duplicated genes has been characterized, leaving many with biological functions yet to be discovered. Here we discuss how genomic duplication is associated with the occurrence of novel aaRSs and aaRS-like proteins that provide adaptive advantages to their hosts. We illustrate the variety of activities that have evolved from the primordial aaRS catalytic sites. This precedent underscores the need to investigate currently unexplored aaRS genomic duplications as they may hold a key to the discovery of exciting biological processes, new drug targets, important bioactive molecules, and tools for synthetic biology applications.Entities:
Keywords: aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase; evolution; gene duplication; genetic code; noncanonical functions; tRNA; translation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36060688 PMCID: PMC9437257 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2022.983245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.755
FIGURE 1(A) Duplication and divergence of aaRS genes. Genomic duplication generates a new aaRS gene (aaRS gene 2) while preserving the parental copy (aaRS gene 1) which is responsible for the housekeeping tRNA aminoacylation activity. The second copy (aaRS gene 2) either develops new characteristics under specific selection pressures (auxiliary function, purple rounded squares) or a combination of genetic drift and selection can produce an aaRS-like protein with new activity (green boxes) (B) From the parental aaRS protein, mutations and protein architecture can change, leading to non-canonical functions. Domain mutations generally give rise to auxiliary functions while aaRS-like proteins are found with inactive domains, or the loss or addition of domains.
List of duplicated aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases and their evolved function.
| aaRS | Auxiliary function | Paralog function |
|---|---|---|
| AlaRS | — | (a) aa:CP ligases add Ala to Ppant which is linked to a carrier protein ( |
| AspRS | — | (a) AS-A/AS-AR synthesizes |
| (b) ErdS catalyzes synthesis of Erg-Asp ( | ||
| CysRS | — | (a) CysRS* inserts Cys at opal (UGA) codons ( |
| (b) MhC catalyzes Cys ligation onto GlN-Ins in MHS biosynthesis ( | ||
| GluRS | — | (a) YadB (Glu-Q-RS) transfers Glu onto queuosine of anticodon in Asp-tRNAAsp ( |
| GlyRS | (a) GlyRS2 produces Gly-tRNAGly at high temperatures ( | (a) aa:CP ligases add Gly to Ppant which is linked to a carrier protein ( |
| HisRS | — | (a) HisZ synthesizes |
| IleRS | (a) IleRS2 is resistant to mupirocin ( | (a) SbzA transfers Ile onto altemicidin ( |
| LeuRS | (a) LeuRS-I produces leucyl-adenylates ( | — |
| (b) LeuRS2 produces low levels of Leu-tRNALeu ( | ||
| LysRS | — | (a) LysU produces Lys-tRNALys under stress ( |
| (b) PoxA (GenX, YjeA) transfers β-lysine onto EF-P ( | ||
| (c) LysX transfers Lys to peptidoglycan ( | ||
| ProRS | — | (a) ProRSx inserts Pro at Ala codons ( |
| PylRS | — | (a) PylRS2 aminoacylates cognate tRNAPyl ( |
| SerRS | (a) SerRS2 is resistant to albomycin ( | (a) SLIMP regulates cell-cycle progression ( |
| (b) aa:CP ligases add Ser to Ppant which is linked to a carrier protein ( | ||
| ThrRS | (a) T2 produces Ser-tRNAThr in low zinc conditions ( | (a) ThrRS-L plays a role in the MSC and recycles tRNAThr for ThrRS under stress ( |
| (b) ThrRS-L produces Thr-tRNAThr but with poor editing activity ( | ||
| TrpRS | (a) TrpRSII nitrates Trp on Trp-tRNATrp in toxic environments ( | — |
| (b) TrpRS1 is resistant to indolmycin ( | ||
| TyrRS | (a) TyrZ produces Tyr-tRNATyr with high selectivity for l-Tyr under stress ( | — |
| (b) Two fused TyrRSs produce 1 or 2 Tyr-tRNATyr ( |