Abstract

ABSTRACTThe Nudix homology clan encompasses over 80,000 protein domains from all three domains of life, defined by homology to each other. Proteins with a domain from this clan fall into four general functional classes: pyrophosphohydrolases, isopentenyl diphosphate isomerases (IDIs), adenine/guanine mismatch‐specific adenine glycosylases (A/G‐specific adenine glycosylases), and nonenzymatic activities such as protein/protein interaction and transcriptional regulation. The largest group, pyrophosphohydrolases, encompasses more than 100 distinct hydrolase specificities. To understand the evolution of this vast number of activities, we assembled and analyzed experimental and structural data for 205 Nudix proteins collected from the literature. We corrected erroneous functions or provided more appropriate descriptions for 53 annotations described in the Gene Ontology Annotation database in this family, and propose 275 new experimentally‐based annotations. We manually constructed a structure‐guided sequence alignment of 78 Nudix proteins. Using the structural alignment as a seed, we then made an alignment of 347 “select” Nudix homology domains, curated from structurally determined, functionally characterized, or phylogenetically important Nudix domains. Based on our review of Nudix pyrophosphohydrolase structures and specificities, we further analyzed a loop region downstream of the Nudix hydrolase motif previously shown to contact the substrate molecule and possess known functional motifs. This loop region provides a potential structural basis for the functional radiation and evolution of substrate specificity within the hydrolase family. Finally, phylogenetic analyses of the 347 select protein domains and of the complete Nudix homology clan revealed general monophyly with regard to function and a few instances of probable homoplasy. Proteins 2017; 85:775–811. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Highlights

  • The Nudix homology clan is a large, evolutionarily related group of proteins found in organisms from all three domains of cellular life and in viruses

  • The Gene Ontology (GO)[66] is a systematic organization of descriptive terms that aids consistent functional classification. These terms are assigned to gene products in the associated Gene Ontology Annotation database (GOA).[86,87]

  • Pfam Nudix family led to a phylogenetic reconstruction of the Nudix homology clan that demonstrates homoplasy for some functions, but general monophyly for most

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Summary

Introduction

The Nudix homology clan is a large, evolutionarily related group of proteins found in organisms from all three domains of cellular life and in viruses. In Pfam (v27.0, March 2013),[1] five Pfam protein families were classified under the clan (CL0261) named “Nudix Superfamily”: NUDIX (PF00293), DBC1 (PF14443), NUDIXlike (PF09296), NUDIX_2 (PF14815), and NUDIX_4 (PF13869) These proteins fall into four general functional classes: pyrophosphohydrolases, adenine/guanine mismatch-specific adenine glycosylases (A/G-specific adenine glycosylases), isopentenyl diphosphate isomerases (IDIs), and proteins with nonenzymatic activities such as protein interaction and transcriptional regulation. Despite this degree of functional divergence across the clan, all of the 78 structurally characterized clan members (see Materials and Methods) contain a characteristic 130 amino acid beta-grasp domain architecture[2]. Clan members that are not pyrophosphohydrolases still share an VC 2016 THE AUTHORS PROTEINS: STRUCTURE, FUNCTION, AND BIOINFORMATICS PUBLISHED BY WILEY PERIODICALS, INC

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