Origin of evolutionary novelty in proteins: how a high-cysteine chorion protein has evolved.
AUTOR(ES)
Rodakis, G C
RESUMO
The structure of unusual high-cysteine (Hc) proteins (ca. 30 mol %), which are characteristic of the chorion of the silkmoth Bombyx mori, has been determined by determining the sequence of a corresponding cDNA clone. The Hc protein sequence has evolved from a family of more ordinary chorion genes, in large part through fixation of mutations leading to enhanced cysteine content. Mutations of different types are differentially distributed in different parts of the sequence. In two conservative parts, those encoding the amino-terminal signal peptide and the highly structured central region of the protein, only base substitutions have been accepted. By contrast, in two alternating parts, which encode variable arms flanking the central region, deletions and duplications of tandemly repetitive sequences are prominent. Both base substitutions and expansions or deletions of tandemly repetitive elements are important in the evolution of this type of protein; functional constraints of the various protein domains dictate which class of mutations can be accepted.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=346459Documentos Relacionados
- Hybridization-selected translation of Bombyx mori high-cysteine chorion proteins in Xenopus laevis oocytes.
- DNA sequence transfer between two high-cysteine chorion gene families in the silkmoth Bombyx mori.
- How the first biopolymers could have evolved.
- Silkmoth chorion proteins: sequence analysis of the products of a multigene family.
- Domain mobility in proteins: functional and evolutionary implications