以结构为中心的蛋白质进化、设计和适应的观点。

Eric J Deeds, Eugene I Shakhnovich
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引用次数: 21

摘要

蛋白质,由于其在大多数生物过程中的核心作用,代表了分子进化研究的关键主题之一。蛋白质对活细胞不可或缺的本质是,给定的蛋白质可以采用特定的三维形状,这种形状仅由蛋白质的氨基酸序列指定。在过去的几十年里,结构生物学家已经证明了蛋白质可能采用的一系列结构是相当惊人的,这引起了人们对理解蛋白质结构如何随时间变化和进化的强烈兴趣。在这篇综述中,我们考虑了最近的大量工作,试图阐明这种以结构为中心的蛋白质进化图景。这项工作主要集中在蛋白质序列在进化过程中如何发现全新的蛋白质结构(即新的折叠或拓扑结构)。根据这个结构创新的问题,人们一直渴望描述和理解某些类型的蛋白质结构比其他类型的蛋白质结构丰富得多的观察结果,以及蛋白质的这种不均匀分布如何影响发现新形状的过程。我们考虑了一些理论模型,这些模型已经成功地解释了蛋白质群体中的这种异质性,并讨论了越来越多的证据,这些证据表明结构进化过程涉及蛋白质序列和结构彼此之间的差异。我们还考虑了蛋白质可设计性的主题,它涉及到理解蛋白质的结构如何影响可以成功折叠成该结构的序列的数量。理解和量化结构的物理特征与其可设计性之间的关系一直是蛋白质结构和进化研究的长期目标,我们讨论了一些最近的进展,这些进展已经为这个问题提供了一个有希望的答案。最后,我们回顾了相对较新的蛋白质结构系统发育领域,这是一个研究不同生物之间蛋白质结构分布的信息来重建它们之间进化关系的研究领域。综上所述,我们回顾的工作呈现了一幅越来越连贯的画面,即这些独特的聚合物是如何在地球上的生命过程中进化的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A structure-centric view of protein evolution, design, and adaptation.

Proteins, by virtue of their central role in most biological processes, represent one of the key subjects of the study of molecular evolution. Inherent in the indispensability of proteins for living cells is the fact that a given protein can adopt a specific three-dimensional shape that is specified solely by the protein's sequence of amino acids. Over the past several decades, structural biologists have demonstrated that the array of structures that proteins may adopt is quite astounding, and this has lead to a strong interest in understanding how protein structures change and evolve over time. In this review we consider a large body of recent work that attempts to illuminate this structure-centric picture of protein evolution. Much of this work has focused on the question of how completely new protein structures (i.e., new folds or topologies) are discovered by protein sequences as they evolve. Pursuant to this question of structural innovation has been a desire to describe and understand the observation that certain types of protein structures are far more abundant than others and how this uneven distribution of proteins implicates on the process through which new shapes are discovered. We consider a number of theoretical models that have been successful at explaining this heterogeneity in protein populations and discuss the increasing amount of evidence that indicates that the process of structural evolution involves the divergence of protein sequences and structures from one another. We also consider the topic of protein designability, which concerns itself with understanding how a protein's structure influences the number of sequences that can fold successfully into that structure. Understanding and quantifying the relationship between the physical feature of a structure and its designability has been a long-standing goal of the study of protein structure and evolution, and we discuss a number of recent advances that have yielded a promising answer to this question. Finally, we review the relatively new field of protein structural phylogeny, an area of study in which information about the distribution of protein structures among different organisms is used to reconstruct the evolutionary relationships between them. Taken together, the work that we review presents an increasingly coherent picture of how these unique polymers have evolved over the course of life on Earth.

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