Literature DB >> 6599976

The early adaptive evolution of calmodulin.

M L Baba1, M Goodman, J Berger-Cohn, J G Demaille, G Matsuda.   

Abstract

Interaction between gene duplication and natural selection in molecular evolution was investigated utilizing a phylogenetic tree constructed by the parsimony procedure from amino acid sequences of 50 calmodulin-family protein members. The 50 sequences, belonging to seven protein lineages related by gene duplication (calmodulin itself, troponin-C, alkali and regulatory light chains of myosin, parvalbumin, intestinal calcium-binding protein, and glial S-100 phenylalanine-rich protein), came from a wide range of eukaryotic taxa and yielded a denser tree (more branch points within each lineage) than in earlier studies. Evidence obtained from the reconstructed pattern of base substitutions and deletions in these ancestral loci suggests that, during the early history of the family, selection acted as a transforming force on expressed genes among the duplicates to encode molecular sites with new or modified functions. In later stages of descent, however, selection was a conserving force that preserved the structures of many coadapted functional sites. Each branch of the family was found to have a unique average tempo of evolutionary change, apparently regulated through functional constraints. Proteins whose functions dictate multiple interaction with several other macromolecules evolved more slowly than those which display fewer protein-protein and protein-ion interactions, e.g., calmodulin and next troponin-C evolved at the slowest average rates, whereas parvalbumin evolved at the fastest. The history of all lineages, however, appears to be characterized by rapid rates of evolutionary change in earlier periods, followed by slower rates in more recent periods. A particularly sharp contrast between such fast and slow rates is found in the evolution of calmodulin, whose rate of change in earlier eukaryotes was manyfold faster than the average rate over the past 1 billion years. In fact, the amino acid replacements in the nascent calmodulin lineage occurred at residue positions that in extant metazoans are largely invariable, lending further support to the Darwinian hypothesis that natural selection is both a creative and a conserving force in molecular evolution.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6599976     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a040330

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


  26 in total

Review 1.  Myosin light chains and troponin C: structural and evolutionary relationships revealed by amino acid sequence comparisons.

Authors:  J H Collins
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  1991-02       Impact factor: 2.698

2.  Evolution of EF-hand calcium-modulated proteins. I. Relationships based on amino acid sequences.

Authors:  N D Moncrief; R H Kretsinger; M Goodman
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  1990-06       Impact factor: 2.395

3.  Intron analyses reveal multiple calmodulin copies in Littorina.

Authors:  R J Simpson; C S Wilding; J Grahame
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 2.395

Review 4.  Evolution of EF-hand calcium-modulated proteins. II. Domains of several subfamilies have diverse evolutionary histories.

Authors:  S Nakayama; N D Moncrief; R H Kretsinger
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  1992-05       Impact factor: 2.395

5.  Insect muscle actins differ distinctly from invertebrate and vertebrate cytoplasmic actins.

Authors:  N Mounier; M Gouy; D Mouchiroud; J C Prudhomme
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  1992-05       Impact factor: 2.395

6.  Coordination to lanthanide ions distorts binding site conformation in calmodulin.

Authors:  Sean C Edington; Andrea Gonzalez; Thomas R Middendorf; D Brent Halling; Richard W Aldrich; Carlos R Baiz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Greedy selection of species for ancestral state reconstruction on phylogenies: elimination is better than insertion.

Authors:  Guoliang Li; Jian Ma; Louxin Zhang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-02-04       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Amino acid sequences of myosin essential and regulatory light chains from two clam species: comparison with other molluscan myosin light chains.

Authors:  W W Barouch; K E Breese; S A Davidoff; J Leszyk; A G Szent-Györgyi; J L Theibert; J H Collins
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  1991-08       Impact factor: 2.698

9.  A peptide mimetic of calcium.

Authors:  J Dillon; W T Woods; V Guarcello; R D LeBoeuf; J E Blalock
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1991-11-01       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Functional implications of the unusual amino acid sequence of the regulatory light chain of Acanthamoeba castellanii myosin-II.

Authors:  T Kobayashi; H G Zot; T D Pollard; J H Collins
Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil       Date:  1991-12       Impact factor: 2.698

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