Structural Phylogenetics with Confidence

Author:

Malik Ashar J12,Poole Anthony M345,Allison Jane R3456

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Theoretical Chemistry and Physics, School of Natural and Computational Sciences, Massey University Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

2. Bioinformatics Institute, Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Singapore

3. Bioinformatics Institute, School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

4. Digital Life Institute, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

5. Biomolecular Interaction Centre, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

6. Maurice Wilkins Centre for Molecular Biodiscovery, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract For evaluating the deepest evolutionary relationships among proteins, sequence similarity is too low for application of sequence-based homology search or phylogenetic methods. In such cases, comparison of protein structures, which are often better conserved than sequences, may provide an alternative means of uncovering deep evolutionary signal. Although major protein structure databases such as SCOP and CATH hierarchically group protein structures, they do not describe the specific evolutionary relationships within a hierarchical level. Structural phylogenies have the potential to fill this gap. However, it is difficult to assess evolutionary relationships derived from structural phylogenies without some means of assessing confidence in such trees. We therefore address two shortcomings in the application of structural data to deep phylogeny. First, we examine whether phylogenies derived from pairwise structural comparisons are sensitive to differences in protein length and shape. We find that structural phylogenetics is best employed where structures have very similar lengths, and that shape fluctuations generated during molecular dynamics simulations impact pairwise comparisons, but not so drastically as to eliminate evolutionary signal. Second, we address the absence of statistical support for structural phylogeny. We present a method for assessing confidence in a structural phylogeny using shape fluctuations generated via molecular dynamics or Monte Carlo simulations of proteins. Our approach will aid the evolutionary reconstruction of relationships across structurally defined protein superfamilies. With the Protein Data Bank now containing in excess of 158,000 entries (December 2019), we predict that structural phylogenetics will become a useful tool for ordering the protein universe.

Funder

Massey University PhD Scholarship, Completion Grant, and Dissemination

Rutherford Discovery Fellowship

Biomolecular Interaction Centre

New Zealand eScience Infrastructure

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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