Abstract
Epistasis is a key factor in evolution since it determines which combinations of mutations provide adaptive solutions and which mutational pathways toward these solutions are accessible by natural selection. There is growing evidence for the pervasiveness of sign epistasis—a complete reversion of mutational effects, particularly in protein evolution—yet its molecular basis remains poorly understood. We describe the structural basis of sign epistasis between G238S and R164S, two adaptive mutations in TEM-1 β-lactamase— an enzyme that endows antibiotics resistance. Separated by 10Å, these mutations initiate two separate trajectories toward increased hydrolysis rates and resistance toward second and third-generation cephalosporins antibiotics. Both mutations allow the enzyme's active site to adopt alternative conformations and accommodate the new antibiotics. By solving the corresponding set of crystal structures, we found that R164S causes local disorder whereas G238S induces discrete conformations. When combined, the mutations in 238 and 164 induce local disorder whereby nonproductive conformations that perturb the enzyme's catalytic preorganization dominate. Specifically, Asn170 that coordinates the deacylating water molecule is misaligned, in both the free form and the inhibitor-bound double mutant. This local disorder is not restored by stabilizing global suppressor mutations and thus leads to an evolutionary cul-de-sac. Conformational dynamism therefore underlines the reshaping potential of protein's structures and functions but also limits protein evolvability because of the fragility of the interactions networks that maintain protein structures.
Highlights
Epistasis is a key factor in evolution, since it determines which combinations of mutations provide adaptive solutions and which mutational pathways towards these solutions are accessible by natural selection
Epistasis describes which combinations of mutations provide adaptive solutions, and which stepwise mutational pathways leading to these solutions are selectively accessible3,4,5; 6
In the absence of epistasis, the combined effect of the R164S and G238S mutations is expected to be multiplicative at the level of MIC, resulting in up to ~120-fold higher cefotaxime resistance levels relative to wild-type
Summary
Epistasis is a key factor in evolution, since it determines which combinations of mutations provide adaptive solutions and which mutational pathways towards these solutions are accessible by natural selection. To determine the structural basis for this classical case of reciprocal sign epistasis, and to understand why R164S might lead to an evolutionary cul-de-sac, we solved the crystal structures of the R164S, G238S and double mutants R164S/G238S, in their free forms and bound to an inhibitor. These mutations are key first-step mutations in the adaptation of TEM-1 to 2nd and 3rd cephalosporins antibiotics, the structure of enzymes harboring these mutations with no additional active-site mutations have not been available far. The combination of free vs. inhibitor bound and of variable temperature X-ray data allowed for increased sampling of the conformational ensemble of TEM-1, unraveling the structural basis of negative epistasis and evolvability in TEM-1
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