Recently, modularity has emerged as a general attribute of complex biological systems. This is probably because modular systems lend themselves readily to optimization via random mutation followed by natural selection. Although they are not traditionally considered to evolve by this process, biological ligands are also modular, being composed of recurring chemical fragments, and moreover they exhibit similarities reminiscent of mutations (e.g. the few atoms differentiating adenine and guanine). Many ligands are also promiscuous in the sense that they bind to many different protein folds. Here, we investigated whether ligand chemical modularity is reflected in an underlying modularity of binding sites across unrelated proteins. We chose nucleotides as paradigmatic ligands, because they can be described as composed of well-defined fragments (nucleobase, ribose and phosphates) and are quite abundant both in nature and in protein structure databases. We found that nucleotide-binding sites do indeed show a modular organization and are composed of fragment-specific protein structural motifs, which parallel the modular structure of their ligands. Through an analysis of the distribution of these motifs in different proteins and in different folds, we discuss the evolutionary implications of these findings and argue that the structural features we observed can arise both as a result of divergence from a common ancestor or convergent evolution.

Gherardini, P., Ausiello, G., Russell, R., HELMER CITTERICH, M. (2010). Modular architecture of nucleotide-binding pockets. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 38(11), 3809-3816 [10.1093/nar/gkq090].

Modular architecture of nucleotide-binding pockets

Gherardini, PF;AUSIELLO, GABRIELE;HELMER CITTERICH, MANUELA
2010-06-01

Abstract

Recently, modularity has emerged as a general attribute of complex biological systems. This is probably because modular systems lend themselves readily to optimization via random mutation followed by natural selection. Although they are not traditionally considered to evolve by this process, biological ligands are also modular, being composed of recurring chemical fragments, and moreover they exhibit similarities reminiscent of mutations (e.g. the few atoms differentiating adenine and guanine). Many ligands are also promiscuous in the sense that they bind to many different protein folds. Here, we investigated whether ligand chemical modularity is reflected in an underlying modularity of binding sites across unrelated proteins. We chose nucleotides as paradigmatic ligands, because they can be described as composed of well-defined fragments (nucleobase, ribose and phosphates) and are quite abundant both in nature and in protein structure databases. We found that nucleotide-binding sites do indeed show a modular organization and are composed of fragment-specific protein structural motifs, which parallel the modular structure of their ligands. Through an analysis of the distribution of these motifs in different proteins and in different folds, we discuss the evolutionary implications of these findings and argue that the structural features we observed can arise both as a result of divergence from a common ancestor or convergent evolution.
1-giu-2010
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore BIO/11 - BIOLOGIA MOLECOLARE
English
Models, Molecular; Evolution, Molecular; Amino Acid Motifs; Proteins; Nucleotides; Ligands; Binding Sites
Gherardini, P., Ausiello, G., Russell, R., HELMER CITTERICH, M. (2010). Modular architecture of nucleotide-binding pockets. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 38(11), 3809-3816 [10.1093/nar/gkq090].
Gherardini, P; Ausiello, G; Russell, R; HELMER CITTERICH, M
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/15047
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