Directed Evolution of a Model Primordial Enzyme Provides Insights into the Development of the Genetic Code


Date

2013-01-03

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

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Abstract

The contemporary proteinogenic repertoire contains 20 amino acids with diverse functional groups and side chain geometries. Primordial proteins, in contrast, were presumably constructed from a subset of these building blocks. Subsequent expansion of the proteinogenic alphabet would have enhanced their capabilities, fostering the metabolic prowess and organismal fitness of early living systems. While the addition of amino acids bearing innovative functional groups directly enhances the chemical repertoire of proteomes, the inclusion of chemically redundant monomers is difficult to rationalize. Here, we studied how a simplified chorismate mutase evolves upon expanding its amino acid alphabet from nine to potentially 20 letters. Continuous evolution provided an enhanced enzyme variant that has only two point mutations, both of which extend the alphabet and jointly improve protein stability by >4 kcal/mol and catalytic activity tenfold. The same, seemingly innocuous substitutions (Ile→Thr, Leu→Val) occurred in several independent evolutionary trajectories. The increase in fitness they confer indicates that building blocks with very similar side chain structures are highly beneficial for fine-tuning protein structure and function.

Publication status

published

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Book title

Journal / series

Volume

9 (1)

Pages / Article No.

Publisher

PLOS

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Organisational unit

08816 - Kast, Peter (Tit.-Prof.) check_circle
03492 - Hilvert, Donald (emeritus) / Hilvert, Donald (emeritus) check_circle
03304 - Van Gunsteren, Wilfred F. (emeritus) check_circle

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