Protein robustness promotes evolutionary innovations on large evolutionary time-scales
- 22 April 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 275 (1643), 1595-1602
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2007.1617
Abstract
Recent laboratory experiments suggest that a molecule's ability to evolve neutrally is important for its ability to generate evolutionary innovations. In contrast to laboratory experiments, life unfolds on time-scales of billions of years. Here, we ask whether a molecule's ability to evolve neutrally-a measure of its robustness-facilitates evolutionary innovation also on these large time-scales. To this end, we use protein designability, the number of sequences that can adopt a given protein structure, as an estimate of the structure's ability to evolve neutrally. Based on two complementary measures of functional diversity catalytic diversity and molecular functional diversity in gene ontology-we show that more robust proteins have a greater capacity to produce functional innovations. Significant associations among structural designability, folding rate and intrinsic disorder also exist, underlining the complex relationship of the structural factors that affect protein evolution.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Robustness and evolvability: a paradox resolvedProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2007
- Neutral genetic drift can alter promiscuous protein functions, potentially aiding functional evolutionBiology Direct, 2007
- The CATH domain structure database: new protocols and classification levels give a more comprehensive resource for exploring evolutionNucleic Acids Research, 2007
- The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt)Nucleic Acids Research, 2006
- Protein Superfamily Evolution and the Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA)Journal of Molecular Evolution, 2006
- Protein stability promotes evolvabilityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- IUPred: web server for the prediction of intrinsically unstructured regions of proteins based on estimated energy contentBioinformatics, 2005
- Structural Determinant of Protein DesignabilityPhysical Review Letters, 2003
- Contact order, transition state placement and the refolding rates of single domain proteins 1 1Edited by P. E. WrightJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programsNucleic Acids Research, 1997