Abstract
The serpins are a widely distributed group of serine proteinase inhibitors found in plants, birds, mammals and viruses. Despite the great evolutionary divergence of these organisms, their serpins art highly conserved, both in sequence and structurally. Amino acid sequences were aligned by a combination of automatic algorithms and by consideration of conserved structural elements in those serpins for which crystal structures exist. The program HOMED was used which allowed the alignment of amino acids to be simultaneously converted into the equivalently aligned nucleotide sequences. The aligned amino acids were used as the basis for superposition of the four known three-dimensional structures for which coordinates are available and compared with an optimal three-dimensional superposition in order to estimate the reliability of the sequence alignment. Phylogenetic relationships implied by these nucleotide sequence alignments were determined by the method of maximum parsimony. The proposed gene tree suggested that as much diversity existed between the plant serpin and mammalian serpins as was present among mammalian serpins and provided further evidence that the architecture of serpin molecules is highly constrained.