Epistatic Effects Between Amino Acid Insertions and Substitutions Mediate Toxin resistance of Vertebrate Na+,K+-ATPases

Author:

Mohammadi Shabnam12,Özdemir Halil İbrahim3,Ozbek Pemra3ORCID,Sumbul Fidan4,Stiller Josefin5,Deng Yuan56,Crawford Andrew J7,Rowland Hannah M2ORCID,Storz Jay F8ORCID,Andolfatto Peter9,Dobler Susanne1

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Evolutionary Biology, Institute of Cell and Systems Biology of Animals, Universität Hamburg , Hamburg 20146 , Germany

2. Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Research Group Predators and Toxic Prey , Jena 07745 , Germany

3. Department of Bioengineering, Marmara University , Göztepe, İstanbul 34722 , Turkey

4. INSERM, Aix-Marseille Université, Inserm, CNRS , Marseille 13009 , France

5. Villum Centre for Biodiversity Genomics, University of Copenhagen , Copenhagen 2100 , Denmark

6. BGI-Shenzhen , Shenzhen 518083 , China

7. Department of Biological Sciences, Universidad de los Andes , Bogotá , Colombia

8. School of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska , Lincoln, NE

9. Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University , New York, NY

Abstract

Abstract The recurrent evolution of resistance to cardiotonic steroids (CTS) across diverse animals most frequently involves convergent amino acid substitutions in the H1-H2 extracellular loop of Na+,K+-ATPase (NKA). Previous work revealed that hystricognath rodents (e.g., chinchilla) and pterocliform birds (sandgrouse) have convergently evolved amino acid insertions in the H1-H2 loop, but their functional significance was not known. Using protein engineering, we show that these insertions have distinct effects on CTS resistance in homologs of each of the two species that strongly depend on intramolecular interactions with other residues. Removing the insertion in the chinchilla NKA unexpectedly increases CTS resistance and decreases NKA activity. In the sandgrouse NKA, the amino acid insertion and substitution Q111R both contribute to an augmented CTS resistance without compromising ATPase activity levels. Molecular docking simulations provide additional insight into the biophysical mechanisms responsible for the context-specific mutational effects on CTS insensitivity of the enzyme. Our results highlight the diversity of genetic substrates that underlie CTS insensitivity in vertebrate NKA and reveal how amino acid insertions can alter the phenotypic effects of point mutations at key sites in the same protein domain.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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