Epistasis as the primary factor in molecular evolution
- PMID: 23064225
- DOI: 10.1038/nature11510
Epistasis as the primary factor in molecular evolution
Abstract
The main forces directing long-term molecular evolution remain obscure. A sizable fraction of amino-acid substitutions seem to be fixed by positive selection, but it is unclear to what degree long-term protein evolution is constrained by epistasis, that is, instances when substitutions that are accepted in one genotype are deleterious in another. Here we obtain a quantitative estimate of the prevalence of epistasis in long-term protein evolution by relating data on amino-acid usage in 14 organelle proteins and 2 nuclear-encoded proteins to their rates of short-term evolution. We studied multiple alignments of at least 1,000 orthologues for each of these 16 proteins from species from a diverse phylogenetic background and found that an average site contained approximately eight different amino acids. Thus, without epistasis an average site should accept two-fifths of all possible amino acids, and the average rate of amino-acid substitutions should therefore be about three-fifths lower than the rate of neutral evolution. However, we found that the measured rate of amino-acid substitution in recent evolution is 20 times lower than the rate of neutral evolution and an order of magnitude lower than that expected in the absence of epistasis. These data indicate that epistasis is pervasive throughout protein evolution: about 90 per cent of all amino-acid substitutions have a neutral or beneficial impact only in the genetic backgrounds in which they occur, and must therefore be deleterious in a different background of other species. Our findings show that most amino-acid substitutions have different fitness effects in different species and that epistasis provides the primary conceptual framework to describe the tempo and mode of long-term protein evolution.
Comment in
-
Genetics: The inner life of proteins.Nature. 2012 Oct 25;490(7421):493-4. doi: 10.1038/490493a. Nature. 2012. PMID: 23099402 No abstract available.
-
Molecular evolution: epistasis prevails.Nat Rev Genet. 2012 Dec;13(12):828. doi: 10.1038/nrg3369. Epub 2012 Nov 14. Nat Rev Genet. 2012. PMID: 23150037 No abstract available.
-
The role of epistasis in protein evolution.Nature. 2013 May 30;497(7451):E1-2; discussion E2-3. doi: 10.1038/nature12219. Nature. 2013. PMID: 23719465 No abstract available.
References
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
