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. 2005 Mar 18;280(11):10189-95.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.M413540200. Epub 2005 Jan 4.

Resurrecting the ancestral enzymatic role of a modulatory subunit

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Resurrecting the ancestral enzymatic role of a modulatory subunit

Miguel A Ballicora et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

In the post-genomic era, functional prediction of genes is largely based on sequence similarity searches, but sometimes the homologues bear different roles because of evolutionary adaptations. For instance, the existence of enzyme and non-enzyme homologues poses a difficult case for function prediction and the extent of this phenomenon is just starting to be surveyed. Different evolutionary paths are theoretically possible for the loss or acquisition of enzyme function. Here we studied the ancestral role of a model non-catalytic modulatory subunit. With a rational approach, we "resurrected" enzymatic activity from that subunit to experimentally prove that it derived from a catalytic ancestor. We show that this protein (L subunit ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase) evolved to have a regulatory role, losing catalytic residues more than 130 million years ago, but preserving, possibly as a by-product, the substrate site architecture. Inactivation of catalytic subunits could be the consequence of a general evolutionary strategy to explore new regulatory roles in hetero-oligomers.

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