Urano Daisuke, Dong Taoran, Bennetzen Jeffrey L, Jones Alan M
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Department of Genetics, University of Georgia.
Mol Biol Evol. 2015 Apr;32(4):998-1007. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msu404. Epub 2015 Jan 6.
Proteins that interact coevolve their structures. When mutation disrupts the interaction, compensation by the partner occurs to restore interaction otherwise counterselection occurs. We show in this study how a destabilizing mutation in one protein is compensated by a stabilizing mutation in its protein partner and their coevolving path. The pathway in this case and likely a general principle of coevolution is that the compensatory change must tolerate both the original and derived structures with equivalence in function and activity. Evolution of the structure of signaling elements in a network is constrained by specific protein pair interactions, by requisite conformational changes, and by catalytic activity. The heterotrimeric G protein-coupled signaling is a paragon of this protein interaction/function complexity and our deep understanding of this pathway in diverse organisms lends itself to evolutionary study. Regulators of G protein Signaling (RGS) proteins accelerate the intrinsic GTP hydrolysis rate of the Gα subunit of the heterotrimeric G protein complex. An important RGS-contact site is a hydroxyl-bearing residue on the switch I region of Gα subunits in animals and most plants, such as Arabidopsis. The exception is the grasses (e.g., rice, maize, sugarcane, millets); these plants have Gα subunits that replaced the critical hydroxyl-bearing threonine with a destabilizing asparagine shown to disrupt interaction between Arabidopsis RGS protein (AtRGS1) and the grass Gα subunit. With one known exception (Setaria italica), grasses do not encode RGS genes. One parsimonious deduction is that the RGS gene was lost in the ancestor to the grasses and then recently acquired horizontally in the lineage S. italica from a nongrass monocot. Like all investigated grasses, S. italica has the Gα subunit with the destabilizing asparagine residue in the protein interface but, unlike other known grass genomes, still encodes an expressed RGS gene, SiRGS1. SiRGS1 accelerates GTP hydrolysis at similar concentration of both Gα subunits containing either the stabilizing (AtGPA1) or destabilizing (RGA1) interface residue. SiRGS1 does not use the hydroxyl-bearing residue on Gα to promote GAP activity and has a larger Gα-interface pocket fitting to the destabilizing Gα. These findings indicate that SiRGS1 adapted to a deleterious mutation on Gα using existing polymorphism in the RGS protein population.
相互作用的蛋白质会共同进化其结构。当突变破坏相互作用时,伙伴蛋白会发生补偿作用以恢复相互作用,否则就会发生反选择。在本研究中,我们展示了一种蛋白质中的不稳定突变如何通过其蛋白质伙伴中的稳定突变及其共同进化路径得到补偿。在这种情况下的途径以及可能的共同进化一般原则是,补偿性变化必须在功能和活性上等效地容忍原始结构和衍生结构。网络中信号元件结构的进化受到特定蛋白质对相互作用、必要的构象变化和催化活性的限制。异源三聚体G蛋白偶联信号传导是这种蛋白质相互作用/功能复杂性的典范,我们对不同生物体中该途径的深入理解有助于进行进化研究。G蛋白信号调节因子(RGS)蛋白可加速异源三聚体G蛋白复合物Gα亚基的内在GTP水解速率。一个重要的RGS接触位点是动物和大多数植物(如拟南芥)中Gα亚基开关I区域上带有羟基的残基。例外的是禾本科植物(如水稻、玉米、甘蔗、粟);这些植物的Gα亚基用一个不稳定的天冬酰胺取代了关键的带羟基的苏氨酸,这被证明会破坏拟南芥RGS蛋白(AtRGS1)与禾本科植物Gα亚基之间的相互作用。除了一个已知的例外(狗尾草)外,禾本科植物不编码RGS基因。一种简约推断是,RGS基因在禾本科植物的祖先中丢失,然后最近在狗尾草谱系中从非禾本科单子叶植物水平获得。与所有研究过的禾本科植物一样,狗尾草的Gα亚基在蛋白质界面中有不稳定的天冬酰胺残基,但与其他已知的禾本科植物基因组不同,它仍然编码一个表达的RGS基因SiRGS1。SiRGS1在含有稳定(AtGPA1)或不稳定(RGA1)界面残基的两种Gα亚基浓度相似时加速GTP水解。SiRGS1不利用Gα上带羟基的残基来促进GAP活性,并且有一个更大的Gα界面口袋适合不稳定的Gα。这些发现表明,SiRGS1利用RGS蛋白群体中的现有多态性适应了Gα上的有害突变。