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Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance

Protein space is a rich analogy for genotype-phenotype maps, where amino acid sequence is organized into a high-dimensional space that highlights the connectivity between protein variants. It is a useful abstraction for understanding the process of evolution, and for efforts to engineer proteins tow...

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Autores principales: Ogbunugafor, C. Brandon, Guerrero, Rafael F., Shakhnovich, Eugene I., Shoulders, Matthew D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10104174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37066177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.09.535490
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author Ogbunugafor, C. Brandon
Guerrero, Rafael F.
Shakhnovich, Eugene I.
Shoulders, Matthew D.
author_facet Ogbunugafor, C. Brandon
Guerrero, Rafael F.
Shakhnovich, Eugene I.
Shoulders, Matthew D.
author_sort Ogbunugafor, C. Brandon
collection PubMed
description Protein space is a rich analogy for genotype-phenotype maps, where amino acid sequence is organized into a high-dimensional space that highlights the connectivity between protein variants. It is a useful abstraction for understanding the process of evolution, and for efforts to engineer proteins towards desirable phenotypes. Few framings of protein space consider how higher-level protein phenotypes can be described in terms of their biophysical dimensions, nor do they rigorously interrogate how forces like epistasis—describing the nonlinear interaction between mutations and their phenotypic consequences—manifest across these dimensions. In this study, we deconstruct a low-dimensional protein space of a bacterial enzyme (dihydrofolate reductase; DHFR) into “subspaces” corresponding to a set of kinetic and thermodynamic traits [(k(cat), K(M), K(i), and T(m) (melting temperature)]. We then examine how three mutations (eight alleles in total) display pleiotropy in their interactions across these subspaces. We extend this approach to examine protein spaces across three orthologous DHFR enzymes (Escherichia coli, Listeria grayi, and Chlamydia muridarum), adding a genotypic context dimension through which epistasis occurs across subspaces. In doing so, we reveal that protein space is a deceptively complex notion, and that the process of protein evolution and engineering should consider how interactions between amino acid substitutions manifest across different phenotypic subspaces.
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spelling pubmed-101041742023-04-15 Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance Ogbunugafor, C. Brandon Guerrero, Rafael F. Shakhnovich, Eugene I. Shoulders, Matthew D. bioRxiv Article Protein space is a rich analogy for genotype-phenotype maps, where amino acid sequence is organized into a high-dimensional space that highlights the connectivity between protein variants. It is a useful abstraction for understanding the process of evolution, and for efforts to engineer proteins towards desirable phenotypes. Few framings of protein space consider how higher-level protein phenotypes can be described in terms of their biophysical dimensions, nor do they rigorously interrogate how forces like epistasis—describing the nonlinear interaction between mutations and their phenotypic consequences—manifest across these dimensions. In this study, we deconstruct a low-dimensional protein space of a bacterial enzyme (dihydrofolate reductase; DHFR) into “subspaces” corresponding to a set of kinetic and thermodynamic traits [(k(cat), K(M), K(i), and T(m) (melting temperature)]. We then examine how three mutations (eight alleles in total) display pleiotropy in their interactions across these subspaces. We extend this approach to examine protein spaces across three orthologous DHFR enzymes (Escherichia coli, Listeria grayi, and Chlamydia muridarum), adding a genotypic context dimension through which epistasis occurs across subspaces. In doing so, we reveal that protein space is a deceptively complex notion, and that the process of protein evolution and engineering should consider how interactions between amino acid substitutions manifest across different phenotypic subspaces. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC10104174/ /pubmed/37066177 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.09.535490 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , which allows reusers to copy and distribute the material in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to the creator.
spellingShingle Article
Ogbunugafor, C. Brandon
Guerrero, Rafael F.
Shakhnovich, Eugene I.
Shoulders, Matthew D.
Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance
title Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance
title_full Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance
title_fullStr Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance
title_full_unstemmed Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance
title_short Epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance
title_sort epistasis meets pleiotropy in shaping biophysical protein subspaces associated with antimicrobial resistance
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10104174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37066177
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.09.535490
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