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      Enzyme Efficiency but Not Thermostability Drives Cefotaxime Resistance Evolution in TEM-1 β-Lactamase

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          Abstract

          A leading intellectual challenge in evolutionary genetics is to identify the specific phenotypes that drive adaptation. Enzymes offer a particularly promising opportunity to pursue this question, because many enzymes’ contributions to organismal fitness depend on a comparatively small number of experimentally accessible properties. Moreover, on first principles the demands of enzyme thermostability stand in opposition to the demands of catalytic activity. This observation, coupled with the fact that enzymes are only marginally thermostable, motivates the widely held hypothesis that mutations conferring functional improvement require compensatory mutations to restore thermostability. Here, we explicitly test this hypothesis for the first time, using four missense mutations in TEM-1 β-lactamase that jointly increase cefotaxime Minimum Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) ∼1500-fold. First, we report enzymatic efficiency ( k cat/ K M) and thermostability ( T m, and thence Δ G of folding) for all combinations of these mutations. Next, we fit a quantitative model that predicts MIC as a function of k cat/ K M and Δ G. While k cat/ K M explains ∼54% of the variance in cefotaxime MIC (∼92% after log transformation), Δ G does not improve explanatory power of the model. We also find that cefotaxime MIC rises more slowly in k cat/ K M than predicted. Several explanations for these discrepancies are suggested. Finally, we demonstrate substantial sign epistasis in MIC and k cat/ K M, and antagonistic pleiotropy between phenotypes, in spite of near numerical additivity in the system. Thus constraints on selectively accessible trajectories, as well as limitations in our ability to explain such constraints in terms of underlying mechanisms are observed in a comparatively “well-behaved” system.

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          Epistasis--the essential role of gene interactions in the structure and evolution of genetic systems.

          Epistasis, or interactions between genes, has long been recognized as fundamentally important to understanding the structure and function of genetic pathways and the evolutionary dynamics of complex genetic systems. With the advent of high-throughput functional genomics and the emergence of systems approaches to biology, as well as a new-found ability to pursue the genetic basis of evolution down to specific molecular changes, there is a renewed appreciation both for the importance of studying gene interactions and for addressing these questions in a unified, quantitative manner.
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            Conspectus florae Graecae / auctore E. de Halácsy.

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              Missense meanderings in sequence space: a biophysical view of protein evolution.

              Proteins are finicky molecules; they are barely stable and are prone to aggregate, but they must function in a crowded environment that is full of degradative enzymes bent on their destruction. It is no surprise that many common diseases are due to missense mutations that affect protein stability and aggregation. Here we review the literature on biophysics as it relates to molecular evolution, focusing on how protein stability and aggregation affect organismal fitness. We then advance a biophysical model of protein evolution that helps us to understand phenomena that range from the dynamics of molecular adaptation to the clock-like rate of protein evolution.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Mol Biol Evol
                Mol. Biol. Evol
                molbev
                Molecular Biology and Evolution
                Oxford University Press
                0737-4038
                1537-1719
                May 2017
                12 January 2017
                12 January 2017
                : 34
                : 5
                : 1040-1054
                Affiliations
                Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI
                Author notes
                [†]

                Present address: Department of Molecular Biology and Chemistry, Christopher Newport University, Newport News, VA

                [‡]

                Present address: Women’s and Infants Hospital, and Warren Alpert Medical School, Brown University, Providence, RI

                Associate editor: Miriam Barlow

                [* ] Corresponding author: E-mail: daniel_weinreich@ 123456brown.edu .
                Article
                msx053
                10.1093/molbev/msx053
                5400381
                28087769
                59c59c6b-d2d9-472a-b6fe-4508e627d781
                © The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com

                History
                Page count
                Pages: 15
                Categories
                Discoveries

                Molecular biology
                enzyme evolution,β-lactamase,functional synthesis,drug-resistance evolution,sign epistasis,antagonistic pleiotropy

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