Abstract

The sequence of all presently known trypsin-related serine proteases and their zymogens of animal and bacterial origin were optimally aligned on the basis of three different scoring schemes for amino acid comparisons. Sequence homology was found to extend into the activation peptides. The gaps resulting from the alignment of the sequences of the active enzymes formed the basis for a new procedure based on position and number of gaps, which allowed the correct topology of the evolutionary relationship of thrombin and the pancreatic enzymes trypsin, chymotrypsin and elastase to be determined. The procedure was applied in an analogous manner to changes in disulfide bridges as well as to a selected set of amino acid positions. Evolutionary distances between proteins were estimated by minimum, base differences as well as according to the stochastic model of evolution. These distances were used successfully to find the best topology of evolutionary relationships. The fact that the branch lengths in evolutionary trees were less affected by the number of sequences considered when evolutionary distances between contemporary sequences were measured in minimum base differences than when measured according to the stochastic model of evolution, suggested in our specific case, that minimum base differences yielded estimates of evolutionary distance closer to reality than the stochastic model of evolution. All these techniques combined yielded the following picture for the evolution of the four protease families. Prothrombin and the zymogens of the pancreatic serine proteases had a common ancestor with tryptic specificity. After the initial divergence, the gene for trypsinogen duplicated. Evidence was found that the duplicated gene underwent drastic changes for a short period of time to become eventually the common ancestor of chymotrypsin and elastase. The phylogenetic tree elaborated for these enzyme families and the methods introduced to determine its topology, should readily allow determination of the attachment site of branches leading to newly sequenced serine proteases, provided their amino acid sequence can be aligned fairly unambiguously. In addition, the consequences of the alignment of the different serine proteases for the relationship of zymogen to enzyme are discussed.

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