Molecular function limits divergent protein evolution on planetary timescales

Author:

Konaté Mariam M12,Plata Germán1ORCID,Park Jimin13,Usmanova Dinara R1ORCID,Wang Harris13ORCID,Vitkup Dennis14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Systems Biology, Columbia University, New York, United States

2. Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, United States

3. Department of Pathology and Cell Biology, Columbia University, New York, United States

4. Department of Biomedical Informatics, Columbia University, New York, United States

Abstract

Functional conservation is known to constrain protein evolution. Nevertheless, the long-term divergence patterns of proteins maintaining the same molecular function and the possible limits of this divergence have not been explored in detail. We investigate these fundamental questions by characterizing the divergence between ancient protein orthologs with conserved molecular function. Our results demonstrate that the decline of sequence and structural similarities between such orthologs significantly slows down after ~1–2 billion years of independent evolution. As a result, the sequence and structural similarities between ancient orthologs have not substantially decreased for the past billion years. The effective divergence limit (>25% sequence identity) is not primarily due to protein sites universally conserved in all linages. Instead, less than four amino acid types are accepted, on average, per site across orthologous protein sequences. Our analysis also reveals different divergence patterns for protein sites with experimentally determined small and large fitness effects of mutations.Editorial note: This article has been through an editorial process in which the authors decide how to respond to the issues raised during peer review. The Reviewing Editor's assessment is that all the issues have been addressed (<xref ref-type="decision-letter" rid="SA1">see decision letter</xref>).

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

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

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