TY - JOUR
T1 - Contact density affects protein evolutionary rate from bacteria to animals
AU - Zhou, Tong
AU - Drummond, D. Allan
AU - Wilke, Claus O.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by NIH Grant AI 065960. D.A.D. received support through an NIH center grant to the FAS Center for Systems Biology. We would like to thank Jesse Bloom for helpful comments on this work.
PY - 2008/4
Y1 - 2008/4
N2 - The density of contacts or the fraction of buried sites in a protein structure is thought to be related to a protein's designability, and genes encoding more designable proteins should evolve faster than other genes. Several recent studies have tested this hypothesis but have found conflicting results. Here, we investigate how a gene's evolutionary rate is affected by its protein's contact density, considering the four species Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Drosophila melanogaster, and Homo sapiens. We find for all four species that contact density correlates positively with evolutionary rate, and that these correlations do not seem to be confounded by gene expression level. The strength of this signal, however, varies widely among species. We also study the effect of contact density on domain evolution in multidomain proteins and find that a domain's contact density influences the domain's evolutionary rate. Within the same protein, a domain with higher contact density tends to evolve faster than a domain with lower contact density. Our study provides evidence that contact density can increase evolutionary rates, and that it acts similarly on the level of entire proteins and of individual protein domains.
AB - The density of contacts or the fraction of buried sites in a protein structure is thought to be related to a protein's designability, and genes encoding more designable proteins should evolve faster than other genes. Several recent studies have tested this hypothesis but have found conflicting results. Here, we investigate how a gene's evolutionary rate is affected by its protein's contact density, considering the four species Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Drosophila melanogaster, and Homo sapiens. We find for all four species that contact density correlates positively with evolutionary rate, and that these correlations do not seem to be confounded by gene expression level. The strength of this signal, however, varies widely among species. We also study the effect of contact density on domain evolution in multidomain proteins and find that a domain's contact density influences the domain's evolutionary rate. Within the same protein, a domain with higher contact density tends to evolve faster than a domain with lower contact density. Our study provides evidence that contact density can increase evolutionary rates, and that it acts similarly on the level of entire proteins and of individual protein domains.
KW - Designability
KW - Domain
KW - Evolutionary rate
KW - Principal component regression
KW - Protein evolution
KW - Protein structure
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U2 - 10.1007/s00239-008-9094-4
DO - 10.1007/s00239-008-9094-4
M3 - Article
C2 - 18379715
AN - SCOPUS:43149112799
SN - 0022-2844
VL - 66
SP - 395
EP - 404
JO - Journal of Molecular Evolution
JF - Journal of Molecular Evolution
IS - 4
ER -