Abstract

BackgroundProtein-protein interactions are central to cellular organization, and must have appeared at an early stage of evolution. To understand better their role, we consider a simple model of protein evolution and determine the effect of an explicit selection for Protein-protein interactions.ResultsIn the model, viable sequences all have the same fitness, following the neutral evolution theory. A very simple, two-dimensional lattice representation of the protein structures is used, and the model only considers two kinds of amino acids: hydrophobic and polar. With these approximations, exact calculations are performed. The results do not depend too strongly on these assumptions, since a model using a 3D, off-lattice representation of the proteins gives results in qualitative agreement with the 2D one. With both models, the evolutionary dynamics lead to a steady state population that is enriched in sequences that dimerize with a high affinity, well beyond the minimal level needed to survive. Correspondingly, sequences close to the viability threshold are less abundant in the steady state, being subject to a larger proportion of lethal mutations. The set of viable sequences has a "funnel" shape, consistent with earlier studies: sequences that are highly populated in the steady state are "close" to each other (with proximity being measured by the number of amino acids that differ).ConclusionThis bias in the the steady state sequences should lead to an increased resistance of the population to environmental change and an increased ability to evolve.

Highlights

  • Protein-protein interactions are central to cellular organization, and must have appeared at an early stage of evolution

  • We model the neutral evolution of two proteins, coupled by a selection criterion that requires the formation of a specific Protein-protein interaction

  • Under conditions of moderate selection, where only weak dimerization is required, we find that neutral evolution increases the functional effectiveness of the proteins considered: the steady state population is enriched in sequences coding for proteins that readily dimerize

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Summary

Introduction

Protein-protein interactions are central to cellular organization, and must have appeared at an early stage of evolution. To understand better their role, we consider a simple model of protein evolution and determine the effect of an explicit selection for Protein-protein interactions. It has become clear that proteins are remarkably robust with respect to mutations, retaining structure and function in many cases. This has helped renew interest in theories of evolution that explore the role of "neutral" mutations. A mutation in a protein coding sequence can be neutral if it does not significantly affect the structure, stability, or biochemical function of the protein

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