Testing the neutral fixation of hetero-oligomerism in the archaeal chaperonin CCT.

Mol Biol Evol

Evolutionary Genetics and Bioinformatics Laboratory, Department of Genetics, Smurfit Institute of Genetics, University of Dublin, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.

Published: June 2007

The evolutionary transition from homo-oligomerism to hetero-oligomerism in multimeric proteins and its contribution to function innovation and organism complexity remain to be investigated. Here, we undertake the challenge of contributing to this theoretical ground by investigating the hetero-oligomerism in the molecular chaperonin cytosolic chaperonin containing tailless complex polypeptide 1 (CCT) from archaea. CCT is amenable to this study because, in contrast to eukaryotic CCTs where sub-functionalization after gene duplication has been taken to completion, archaeal CCTs present no evidence for subunit functional specialization. Our analyses yield additional information to previous reports on archaeal CCT paralogy by identifying new duplication events. Analyses of selective constraints show that amino acid sites from 1 subunit have fixed slightly deleterious mutations at inter-subunit interfaces after gene duplication. These mutations have been followed by compensatory mutations in nearby regions of the same subunit and in the interface contact regions of its paralogous subunit. The strong selective constraints in these regions after speciation support the evolutionary entrapment of CCTs as hetero-oligomers. In addition, our results unveil different evolutionary dynamics depending on the degree of CCT hetero-oligomerism. Archaeal CCT protein complexes comprising 3 distinct classes of subunits present 2 evolutionary processes. First, slightly deleterious and compensatory mutations were fixed neutrally at inter-subunit regions. Second, sub-functionalization may have occurred at substrate-binding and adenosine triphosphate-binding regions after the 2nd gene duplication event took place. CCTs with 2 distinct types of subunits did not present evidence of sub-functionalization. Our results provide the 1st in silico evidence for the neutral fixation of hetero-oligomerism in archaeal CCTs and provide information on the evolution of hetero-oligomerism toward sub-functionalization in archaeal CCTs.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msm065DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

hetero-oligomerism archaeal
12
gene duplication
12
archaeal ccts
12
neutral fixation
8
fixation hetero-oligomerism
8
archaeal cct
8
selective constraints
8
compensatory mutations
8
hetero-oligomerism
6
archaeal
6

Similar Publications

Testing the neutral fixation of hetero-oligomerism in the archaeal chaperonin CCT.

Mol Biol Evol

June 2007

Evolutionary Genetics and Bioinformatics Laboratory, Department of Genetics, Smurfit Institute of Genetics, University of Dublin, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.

The evolutionary transition from homo-oligomerism to hetero-oligomerism in multimeric proteins and its contribution to function innovation and organism complexity remain to be investigated. Here, we undertake the challenge of contributing to this theoretical ground by investigating the hetero-oligomerism in the molecular chaperonin cytosolic chaperonin containing tailless complex polypeptide 1 (CCT) from archaea. CCT is amenable to this study because, in contrast to eukaryotic CCTs where sub-functionalization after gene duplication has been taken to completion, archaeal CCTs present no evidence for subunit functional specialization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chaperonins are multisubunit double-ring complexes that mediate the folding of nascent proteins [1] [2]. In bacteria, chaperonins are homo-oligomeric and are composed of seven-membered rings. Eukaryotic and most archaeal chaperonin rings are eight-membered and exhibit varying degrees of hetero-oligomerism [3] [4].

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!