Artículo
Functional Sites Induce Long-Range Evolutionary Constraints in Enzymes
Fecha de publicación:
05/2016
Editorial:
Public Library of Science
Revista:
PLoS Biology
e-ISSN:
1545-7885
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Functional residues in proteins tend to be highly conserved over evolutionary time. However, to what extent functional sites impose evolutionary constraints on nearby or even more distant residues is not known. Here, we report pervasive conservation gradients toward catalytic residues in a dataset of 524 distinct enzymes: evolutionary conservation decreases approximately linearly with increasing distance to the nearest catalytic residue in the protein structure. This trend encompasses, on average, 80% of the residues in any enzyme, and it is independent of known structural constraints on protein evolution such as residue packing or solvent accessibility. Further, the trend exists in both monomeric and multimeric enzymes and irrespective of enzyme size and/or location of the active site in the enzyme structure. By contrast, sites in protein–protein interfaces, unlike catalytic residues, are only weakly conserved and induce only minor rate gradients. In aggregate, these observations show that functional sites, and in particular catalytic residues, induce long-range evolutionary constraints in enzymes.
Palabras clave:
Protein
,
Evolution
,
Functional
,
Constraints
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Articulos(SEDE CENTRAL)
Articulos de SEDE CENTRAL
Articulos de SEDE CENTRAL
Citación
Jack, Benjamin R.; Meyer, Austin G.; Echave, Julián; Wilke, Claus O.; Functional Sites Induce Long-Range Evolutionary Constraints in Enzymes; Public Library of Science; PLoS Biology; 14; 5; 5-2016; 1-23; e1002452
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