Dennis P P, Shimmin L C
Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Microbiol Mol Biol Rev. 1997 Mar;61(1):90-104. doi: 10.1128/mmbr.61.1.90-104.1997.
Halophilic (literally salt-loving) archaea are a highly evolved group of organisms that are uniquely able to survive in and exploit hypersaline environments. In this review, we examine the potential interplay between fluctuations in environmental salinity and the primary sequence and tertiary structure of halophilic proteins. The proteins of halophilic archaea are highly adapted and magnificently engineered to function in an intracellular milieu that is in ionic balance with an external environment containing between 2 and 5 M inorganic salt. To understand the nature of halophilic adaptation and to visualize this interplay, the sequences of genes encoding the L11, L1, L10, and L12 proteins of the large ribosome subunit and Mn/Fe superoxide dismutase proteins from three genera of halophilic archaea have been aligned and analyzed for the presence of synonymous and nonsynonymous nucleotide substitutions. Compared to homologous eubacterial genes, these halophilic genes exhibit an inordinately high proportion of nonsynonymous nucleotide substitutions that result in amino acid replacement in the encoded proteins. More than one-third of the replacements involve acidic amino acid residues. We suggest that fluctuations in environmental salinity provide the driving force for fixation of the excessive number of nonsynonymous substitutions. Tinkering with the number, location, and arrangement of acidic and other amino acid residues influences the fitness (i.e., hydrophobicity, surface hydration, and structural stability) of the halophilic protein. Tinkering is also evident at halophilic protein positions monomorphic or polymorphic for serine; more than one-third of these positions use both the TCN and the AGY serine codons, indicating that there have been multiple nonsynonymous substitutions at these positions. Our model suggests that fluctuating environmental salinity prevents optimization of fitness for many halophilic proteins and helps to explain the unusual evolutionary divergence of their encoding genes.
嗜盐古菌(字面意思为嗜盐)是一类高度进化的生物体,它们具有独特的能力,能够在高盐环境中生存并加以利用。在本综述中,我们研究了环境盐度波动与嗜盐蛋白质的一级序列和三级结构之间的潜在相互作用。嗜盐古菌的蛋白质经过高度适应和精心设计,以在与含有2至5M无机盐的外部环境保持离子平衡的细胞内环境中发挥作用。为了理解嗜盐适应的本质并可视化这种相互作用,我们对来自三个嗜盐古菌属的大核糖体亚基的L11、L1、L10和L12蛋白以及锰/铁超氧化物歧化酶蛋白的编码基因序列进行了比对,并分析了同义核苷酸替换和非同义核苷酸替换的存在情况。与同源的真细菌基因相比,这些嗜盐基因表现出极高比例的非同义核苷酸替换,这些替换导致编码蛋白中的氨基酸替换。超过三分之一的替换涉及酸性氨基酸残基。我们认为,环境盐度的波动为大量非同义替换的固定提供了驱动力。调整酸性和其他氨基酸残基的数量、位置和排列会影响嗜盐蛋白的适应性(即疏水性、表面水合作用和结构稳定性)。在丝氨酸为单态或多态的嗜盐蛋白位置也明显存在调整;这些位置超过三分之一同时使用TCN和AGY丝氨酸密码子,这表明在这些位置发生了多次非同义替换。我们的模型表明,波动的环境盐度阻碍了许多嗜盐蛋白适应性的优化,并有助于解释其编码基因异常的进化分歧。