Rubisco adaptation is more limited by phylogenetic constraint than by catalytic trade-off

Author:

Bouvier Jacques W.,Emms David M.ORCID,Rhodes Timothy,Bolton Jai S.,Brasnett Amelia,Eddershaw Alice,Nielsen Jochem R.,Unitt Anastasia,Whitney Spencer M.,Kelly StevenORCID

Abstract

AbstractRubisco assimilates CO2 to form the sugars that fuel life on earth. Correlations between rubisco kinetic traits across species have led to the proposition that rubisco adaptation is highly constrained by catalytic trade-offs. However, these analyses did not consider the phylogenetic context of the enzymes that were analysed. Thus, it is possible that the correlations observed were an artefact of the presence of phylogenetic signal in rubisco kinetics and the phylogenetic relationship between the species that were sampled. Here, we conducted a phylogenetically-resolved analysis of rubisco kinetics and show that there is a significant phylogenetic signal in rubisco kinetic traits. We re-evaluated the extent of catalytic trade-offs accounting for this phylogenetic signal and found that all were attenuated. Following phylogenetic correction, the largest catalytic trade-offs were observed between the Michaelis constant for CO2 and carboxylase turnover (∼21-37 %), and between the Michaelis constants for CO2 and O2 (∼9-19 %), respectively. All other catalytic trade-offs were substantially attenuated such that they were marginal (<9 %) or non-significant. This phylogenetically resolved analysis of rubisco kinetic evolution also identified kinetic changes that occur concomitant with the evolution of C4 photosynthesis. Finally, we show that phylogenetic constraints (most likely caused by a slow rate of molecular evolution) have played a larger role than catalytic trade-offs in limiting the evolution of rubisco kinetics. Thus, although there is strong evidence for some catalytic trade-offs, rubisco adaptation has been more limited by phylogenetic constraint than by the combined action of all such trade-offs.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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