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Crystal Structure of an Ancient Protein: Evolution by Conformational Epistasis

Science (16 August 2007), 1142819.

X Abstract

The structural mechanisms by which proteins have evolved new functions are known only indirectly. We report x-ray crystal structures of a resurrected ancestral proteinthe ~450 million-year-old precursor of vertebrate glucocorticoid (GR) and mineralocorticoid (MR) receptors. Using structural, phylogenetic, and functional analysis, we identify the specific set of historical mutations that recapitulate the evolution of GR's hormone specificity from an MR-like ancestor. These substitutions repositioned crucial residues to create new receptor-ligand and intraprotein contacts. Strong epistatic interactions occur because one substitution changes the conformational position of another site. "Permissive" mutationssubstitutions of no immediate consequence, which stabilize specific elements of the protein and allow it to tolerate subsequent function-switching changesplayed a major role in determining GR's evolutionary trajectory. 10.1126/science.1142819

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This article has been bookmarked 6 times, initially on 2007-08-18.

2007-11-03 User ramensky
2007-09-18 User bicko
2007-09-16 User dpollard
Group EisenLab
2007-09-10 User csjonline
2007-08-18 User zwang
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