Title of article :
Adaptive Mutations that Prevent Crosstalk Enable the Expansion of Paralogous Signaling Protein Families
Author/Authors :
Emily J. Capra، نويسنده , , Barrett S. Perchuk، نويسنده , , Jeffrey M. Skerker، نويسنده , , Michael T. Laub، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
Orthologous proteins often harbor numerous substitutions, but whether these differences result from neutral or adaptive processes is usually unclear. To tackle this challenge, we examined the divergent evolution of a model bacterial signaling pathway comprising the kinase PhoR and its cognate substrate PhoB. We show that the specificity-determining residues of these proteins are typically under purifying selection but have, in α-proteobacteria, undergone a burst of diversification followed by extended stasis. By reversing mutations that accumulated in an α-proteobacterial PhoR, we demonstrate that these substitutions were adaptive, enabling PhoR to avoid crosstalk with a paralogous pathway that arose specifically in α-proteobacteria. Our findings demonstrate that duplication and the subsequent need to avoid crosstalk strongly influence signaling protein evolution. These results provide a concrete example of how system-wide insulation can be achieved postduplication through a surprisingly limited number of mutations. Our work may help explain the apparent ease with which paralogous protein families expanded in all organisms.