Baer B, Millar A H
Centre for Integrative Bee Research (CIBER) and ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, Bayliss Building, The University of Western Australia, 6009 Crawley, Australia.
Centre for Integrative Bee Research (CIBER) and ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology, Bayliss Building, The University of Western Australia, 6009 Crawley, Australia.
J Proteomics. 2016 Mar 1;135:4-11. doi: 10.1016/j.jprot.2015.09.031. Epub 2015 Oct 17.
Evolutionary ecologists are traditionally gene-focused, as genes propagate phenotypic traits across generations and mutations and recombination in the DNA generate genetic diversity required for evolutionary processes. As a consequence, the inheritance of changed DNA provides a molecular explanation for the functional changes associated with natural selection. A direct focus on proteins on the other hand, the actual molecular agents responsible for the expression of a phenotypic trait, receives far less interest from ecologists and evolutionary biologists. This is partially due to the central dogma of molecular biology that appears to define proteins as the 'dead-end of molecular information flow' as well as technical limitations in identifying and studying proteins and their diversity in the field and in many of the more exotic genera often favored in ecological studies. Here we provide an overview of a newly forming field of research that we refer to as 'Evolutionary Proteomics'. We point out that the origins of cellular function are related to the properties of polypeptide and RNA and their interactions with the environment, rather than DNA descent, and that the critical role of horizontal gene transfer in evolution is more about coopting new proteins to impact cellular processes than it is about modifying gene function. Furthermore, post-transcriptional and post-translational processes generate a remarkable diversity of mature proteins from a single gene, and the properties of these mature proteins can also influence inheritance through genetic and perhaps epigenetic mechanisms. The influence of post-transcriptional diversification on evolutionary processes could provide a novel mechanistic underpinning for elements of rapid, directed evolutionary changes and adaptations as observed for a variety of evolutionary processes. Modern state-of the art technologies based on mass spectrometry are now available to identify and quantify peptides, proteins, protein modifications and protein interactions of interest with high accuracy and assess protein diversity and function. Therefore, proteomic technologies can be viewed as providing evolutionary biologist with exciting novel opportunities to understand very early events in functional variation of cellular molecular machinery that are acting as part of evolutionary processes.
传统上,进化生态学家关注的是基因,因为基因能在世代间传递表型性状,而DNA中的突变和重组会产生进化过程所需的遗传多样性。因此,DNA变化的遗传为与自然选择相关的功能变化提供了分子解释。另一方面,直接关注蛋白质,即负责表型性状表达的实际分子媒介,却很少受到生态学家和进化生物学家的关注。部分原因是分子生物学的中心法则似乎将蛋白质定义为“分子信息流的终点”,以及在识别和研究蛋白质及其在野外以及许多生态研究中常青睐的更奇特属中的多样性方面存在技术限制。在此,我们概述了一个新形成的研究领域,我们称之为“进化蛋白质组学”。我们指出,细胞功能的起源与多肽和RNA的特性及其与环境的相互作用有关,而非DNA遗传,并且水平基因转移在进化中的关键作用更多地在于引入新蛋白质以影响细胞过程,而非改变基因功能。此外,转录后和翻译后过程从单个基因产生了成熟蛋白质的显著多样性,这些成熟蛋白质的特性也可通过遗传机制甚至可能是表观遗传机制影响遗传。转录后多样化对进化过程可能产生的影响,可为观察到的各种进化过程中的快速、定向进化变化和适应的要素提供一种新的机制基础。基于质谱的现代先进技术现已可用于高精度地鉴定和定量感兴趣的肽、蛋白质、蛋白质修饰和蛋白质相互作用,并评估蛋白质多样性和功能。因此,蛋白质组学技术可被视为为进化生物学家提供了令人兴奋的新机会,以了解作为进化过程一部分的细胞分子机器功能变异的早期事件。