Abstract

The evolution of tRNA multigene families remains poorly understood, exhibiting unusual phenomena such as functional conversions of tRNA genes through anticodon shift substitutions. We improved FlyBase tRNA gene annotations from twelve Drosophila species, incorporating previously identified ortholog sets to compare substitution rates across tRNA bodies at single-site and base-pair resolution. All rapidly evolving sites fell within the same metal ion-binding pocket that lies at the interface of the two major stacked helical domains. We applied our tRNA Structure–Function Mapper (tSFM) method independently to each Drosophila species and one outgroup species Musca domestica and found that, although predicted tRNA structure–function maps are generally highly conserved in flies, one tRNA Class-Informative Feature (CIF) within the rapidly evolving ion-binding pocket—Cytosine 17 (C17), ancestrally informative for lysylation identity—independently gained asparaginylation identity and substituted in parallel across tRNAAsn paralogs at least once, possibly multiple times, during evolution of the genus. In D. melanogaster, most tRNALys and tRNAAsn genes are co-arrayed in one large heterologous gene cluster, suggesting that heterologous gene conversion as well as structural similarities of tRNA-binding interfaces in the closely related asparaginyl-tRNA synthetase (AsnRS) and lysyl-tRNA synthetase (LysRS) proteins may have played a role in these changes. A previously identified Asn-to-Lys anticodon shift substitution in D. ananassae may have arisen to compensate for the convergent and parallel gains of C17 in tRNAAsn paralogs in that lineage. Our results underscore the functional and evolutionary relevance of our tRNA structure–function map predictions and illuminate multiple genomic and structural factors contributing to rapid, parallel and compensatory evolution of tRNA multigene families.

Highlights

  • Transfer RNAs were the first family of RNAs to be directly sequenced (Holley 1965) and the first to be solved by X-ray crystallography (Holley et al 1965)

  • Even though our Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) structure–function maps are based on an information criterion rather than a conservation criterion, we recently showed that tRNA Class-Informative Feature (CIF), including ClassInformative Base-Pairs (CIBPs) and Class-Informative MisPairs (CIMPs), are highly conserved within trypanosomes and between trypanosomes and humans, even while showing evidence of co-evolutionary divergence (Kelly et al 2020)

  • We built a custom database of tRNA genes for the Drosophila twelve genomes based on FlyBase release 2008–07 (Tweedie et al 2009) downloaded on October 19, 2011, which contained a total of 3494 tRNA genes

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Summary

Introduction

Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) were the first family of RNAs to be directly sequenced (Holley 1965) and the first to be solved by X-ray crystallography (Holley et al 1965). The small sizes and high similarities of tRNA genes pose obstacles to inferring their orthology, which is needed to better understand the evolutionary processes underlying functional turnover of tRNA genes. An important step forward came from the “micro-syntenic" approach to infer tRNA gene orthology using flanking sequences, first applied in Drosophila (Rogers et al 2010) and later to other eukaryotes (Rogers and Griffiths-Jones 2014). These studies revealed that functional turnover of tRNA genes through anticodon shift substitutions is more frequent and widespread than previously known.

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