Ancient Loss of Catalytic Selenocysteine Spurred Convergent Adaptation in a Mammalian Oxidoreductase

Author:

Rees Jasmin12ORCID,Sarangi Gaurab3,Cheng Qing4,Floor Martin56,Andrés Aida M2,Oliva Miguel Baldomero7ORCID,Villà-Freixa Jordi58ORCID,Arnér Elias S J49,Castellano Sergi110ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London , London , UK

2. Division of Biosciences, University College London , London , UK

3. Department of Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology , Leipzig , Germany

4. Division of Biochemistry, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm , Sweden

5. Department of Biosciences, Faculty of Sciences and Technology, Universitat de Vic—Universitat Central de Catalunya , Vic , Spain

6. Department of Life Sciences, Barcelona Supercomputing Center (BSC) , Barcelona , Spain

7. Department of Health and Experimental Sciences, Universitat Pompeu Fabra , Barcelona , Spain

8. Institut de Recerca i Innovació en Ciències de la Vida i de la Salut a la Catalunya Central (IRIS-CC) , Vic , Spain

9. Department of Selenoprotein Research, National Institute of Oncology , Budapest , Hungary

10. UCL Genomics, University College London , London , UK

Abstract

Abstract Selenocysteine, the 21st amino acid specified by the genetic code, is a rare selenium-containing residue found in the catalytic site of selenoprotein oxidoreductases. Selenocysteine is analogous to the common cysteine amino acid, but its selenium atom offers physical–chemical properties not provided by the corresponding sulfur atom in cysteine. Catalytic sites with selenocysteine in selenoproteins of vertebrates are under strong purifying selection, but one enzyme, glutathione peroxidase 6 (GPX6), independently exchanged selenocysteine for cysteine <100 million years ago in several mammalian lineages. We reconstructed and assayed these ancient enzymes before and after selenocysteine was lost and up to today and found them to have lost their classic ability to reduce hydroperoxides using glutathione. This loss of function, however, was accompanied by additional amino acid changes in the catalytic domain, with protein sites concertedly changing under positive selection across distant lineages abandoning selenocysteine in glutathione peroxidase 6. This demonstrates a narrow evolutionary range in maintaining fitness when sulfur in cysteine impairs the catalytic activity of this protein, with pleiotropy and epistasis likely driving the observed convergent evolution. We propose that the mutations shared across distinct lineages may trigger enzymatic properties beyond those in classic glutathione peroxidases, rather than simply recovering catalytic rate. These findings are an unusual example of adaptive convergence across mammalian selenoproteins, with the evolutionary signatures possibly representing the evolution of novel oxidoreductase functions.

Funder

Karolinska Institutet

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation

Swedish Cancer Society

Swedish Research Council

National Laboratories Excellence program under the National Tumor Biology Laboratory project

Hungarian Thematic Excellence Programme

National Research, Development and Innovation Office

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

UCL’s Wellcome Institutional Strategic Support Fund 3

NIHR GOSH BRC

NHS

NIHR

Department of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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