Contingency and chance erase necessity in the experimental evolution of ancestral proteins

Author:

Xie Victoria Cochran1,Pu Jinyue1,Metzger Brian PH2ORCID,Thornton Joseph W23ORCID,Dickinson Bryan C1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, University of Chicago, Chicago, United States

2. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, United States

3. Department of Human Genetics, University of Chicago, Chicago, United States

Abstract

The roles of chance, contingency, and necessity in evolution are unresolved because they have never been assessed in a single system or on timescales relevant to historical evolution. We combined ancestral protein reconstruction and a new continuous evolution technology to mutate and select proteins in the B-cell lymphoma-2 (BCL-2) family to acquire protein–protein interaction specificities that occurred during animal evolution. By replicating evolutionary trajectories from multiple ancestral proteins, we found that contingency generated over long historical timescales steadily erased necessity and overwhelmed chance as the primary cause of acquired sequence variation; trajectories launched from phylogenetically distant proteins yielded virtually no common mutations, even under strong and identical selection pressures. Chance arose because many sets of mutations could alter specificity at any timepoint; contingency arose because historical substitutions changed these sets. Our results suggest that patterns of variation in BCL-2 sequences – and likely other proteins, too – are idiosyncratic products of a particular and unpredictable course of historical events.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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