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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Essentiality Is a Strong Determinant of Protein Rates of Evolution during Mutation Accumulation Experiments in Escherichia coli

David Alvarez-ponceMario A. FaresChristina ToftMario X. Ruiz-gonzálezBeatriz Sabater-muñoz

subject

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineBiologymedicine.disease_cause010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeProtein evolutionEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsmedicineEscherichia colidN/dSProtein lengthEscherichia coliGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics2. Zero hungerGeneticsExperimental evolutionGenes EssentialModels GeneticEscherichia coli ProteinsGene Expression Regulation BacterialRates of evolutionMutation AccumulationNeutral theoryEssentiality030104 developmental biologyExperimental evolutionMutationNeutral theory of molecular evolutionGenome BacterialResearch Article

description

[EN] The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is considered the most powerful theory to understand the evolutionary behavior of proteins. One of the main predictions of this theory is that essential proteins should evolve slower than dispensable ones owing to increased selective constraints. Comparison of genomes of different species, however, has revealed only small differences between the rates of evolution ofessential and nonessential proteins. In some analyses, these differences vanish once confounding factors are controlled for, whereas in other cases essentiality seems to have an independent, albeit small, effect. It has been argued that comparing relatively distant genomes may entail a number of limitations. For instance, many of the genes that are dispensable in controlled lab conditions may be essential in some of the conditions faced in nature. Moreover, essentiality can change during evolution, and rates of protein evolution are simultaneously shaped by a variety of factors, whose individual effects are difficult to isolate. Here, we conducted two parallel mutation accumulation experiments in Escherichia coli, during 5,500–5,750 generations, and compared the genomes at different points of the experiments. Our approach (a short-term experiment, under highly controlled conditions) enabled us to overcome many of the limitations of previous studies. We observed that essential proteins evolved substantially slower than nonessential ones during our experiments. Strikingly, rates of protein evolution were only moderately affected by expression level and protein length.

10.1093/gbe/evw205https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evw205