Cargando…

Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p

Accounting for continual evolution of deleterious L1 retrotransposon families, which can contain hundreds to thousands of members remains a major issue in mammalian biology. L1 activity generated upwards of 40% of some mammalian genomes, including humans where they remain active, causing genetic def...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Furano, Anthony V., Jones, Charlie E., Periwal, Vipul, Callahan, Kathryn E., Walser, Jean-Claude, Cook, Pamela R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7449397/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32797042
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008991
_version_ 1783574631837335552
author Furano, Anthony V.
Jones, Charlie E.
Periwal, Vipul
Callahan, Kathryn E.
Walser, Jean-Claude
Cook, Pamela R.
author_facet Furano, Anthony V.
Jones, Charlie E.
Periwal, Vipul
Callahan, Kathryn E.
Walser, Jean-Claude
Cook, Pamela R.
author_sort Furano, Anthony V.
collection PubMed
description Accounting for continual evolution of deleterious L1 retrotransposon families, which can contain hundreds to thousands of members remains a major issue in mammalian biology. L1 activity generated upwards of 40% of some mammalian genomes, including humans where they remain active, causing genetic defects and rearrangements. L1 encodes a coiled coil-containing protein that is essential for retrotransposition, and the emergence of novel primate L1 families has been correlated with episodes of extensive amino acid substitutions in the coiled coil. These results were interpreted as an adaptive response to maintain L1 activity, however its mechanism remained unknown. Although an adventitious mutation can inactivate coiled coil function, its effect could be buffered by epistatic interactions within the coiled coil, made more likely if the family contains a diverse set of coiled coil sequences—collectively referred to as the coiled coil sequence space. Amino acid substitutions that do not affect coiled coil function (i.e., its phenotype) could be “hidden” from (not subject to) purifying selection. The accumulation of such substitutions, often referred to as cryptic genetic variation, has been documented in various proteins. Here we report that this phenomenon was in effect during the latest episode of primate coiled coil evolution, which occurred 30–10 MYA during the emergence of primate L1Pa7–L1Pa3 families. First, we experimentally demonstrated that while coiled coil function (measured by retrotransposition) can be eliminated by single epistatic mutations, it nonetheless can also withstand extensive amino acid substitutions. Second, principal component and cluster analysis showed that the coiled coil sequence space of each of the L1Pa7-3 families was notably increased by the presence of distinct, coexisting coiled coil sequences. Thus, sampling related networks of functional sequences rather than traversing discrete adaptive states characterized the persistence L1 activity during this evolutionary event.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7449397
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-74493972020-09-02 Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p Furano, Anthony V. Jones, Charlie E. Periwal, Vipul Callahan, Kathryn E. Walser, Jean-Claude Cook, Pamela R. PLoS Genet Research Article Accounting for continual evolution of deleterious L1 retrotransposon families, which can contain hundreds to thousands of members remains a major issue in mammalian biology. L1 activity generated upwards of 40% of some mammalian genomes, including humans where they remain active, causing genetic defects and rearrangements. L1 encodes a coiled coil-containing protein that is essential for retrotransposition, and the emergence of novel primate L1 families has been correlated with episodes of extensive amino acid substitutions in the coiled coil. These results were interpreted as an adaptive response to maintain L1 activity, however its mechanism remained unknown. Although an adventitious mutation can inactivate coiled coil function, its effect could be buffered by epistatic interactions within the coiled coil, made more likely if the family contains a diverse set of coiled coil sequences—collectively referred to as the coiled coil sequence space. Amino acid substitutions that do not affect coiled coil function (i.e., its phenotype) could be “hidden” from (not subject to) purifying selection. The accumulation of such substitutions, often referred to as cryptic genetic variation, has been documented in various proteins. Here we report that this phenomenon was in effect during the latest episode of primate coiled coil evolution, which occurred 30–10 MYA during the emergence of primate L1Pa7–L1Pa3 families. First, we experimentally demonstrated that while coiled coil function (measured by retrotransposition) can be eliminated by single epistatic mutations, it nonetheless can also withstand extensive amino acid substitutions. Second, principal component and cluster analysis showed that the coiled coil sequence space of each of the L1Pa7-3 families was notably increased by the presence of distinct, coexisting coiled coil sequences. Thus, sampling related networks of functional sequences rather than traversing discrete adaptive states characterized the persistence L1 activity during this evolutionary event. Public Library of Science 2020-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7449397/ /pubmed/32797042 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008991 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Furano, Anthony V.
Jones, Charlie E.
Periwal, Vipul
Callahan, Kathryn E.
Walser, Jean-Claude
Cook, Pamela R.
Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p
title Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p
title_full Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p
title_fullStr Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p
title_full_unstemmed Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p
title_short Cryptic genetic variation enhances primate L1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of ORF1p
title_sort cryptic genetic variation enhances primate l1 retrotransposon survival by enlarging the functional coiled coil sequence space of orf1p
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7449397/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32797042
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008991
work_keys_str_mv AT furanoanthonyv crypticgeneticvariationenhancesprimatel1retrotransposonsurvivalbyenlargingthefunctionalcoiledcoilsequencespaceoforf1p
AT jonescharliee crypticgeneticvariationenhancesprimatel1retrotransposonsurvivalbyenlargingthefunctionalcoiledcoilsequencespaceoforf1p
AT periwalvipul crypticgeneticvariationenhancesprimatel1retrotransposonsurvivalbyenlargingthefunctionalcoiledcoilsequencespaceoforf1p
AT callahankathryne crypticgeneticvariationenhancesprimatel1retrotransposonsurvivalbyenlargingthefunctionalcoiledcoilsequencespaceoforf1p
AT walserjeanclaude crypticgeneticvariationenhancesprimatel1retrotransposonsurvivalbyenlargingthefunctionalcoiledcoilsequencespaceoforf1p
AT cookpamelar crypticgeneticvariationenhancesprimatel1retrotransposonsurvivalbyenlargingthefunctionalcoiledcoilsequencespaceoforf1p