4.6 Article

A thermodynamic model of protein structure evolution explains empirical amino acid substitution matrices

Journal

PROTEIN SCIENCE
Volume 30, Issue 10, Pages 2057-2068

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pro.4155

Keywords

amino acid substitution; exchangeabilities; protein evolution; protein stability; replacement matrices

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01GM096053, R01GM132499]
  2. Vetenskapsradet [2015-04203]
  3. Swedish Research Council [2015-04203] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

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Evolutionary pressures and thermodynamic stability constraints play key roles in shaping the global amino acid substitution patterns observed in proteins, as evidenced by a new hybrid biophysical and evolutionary model. This model accurately recapitulates the complex yet universal patterns seen in common amino acid substitution matrices, suggesting that selection for thermodynamically stable proteins and nucleotide mutation bias filtered by genetic code structure are primary drivers behind these patterns.
Proteins evolve under a myriad of biophysical selection pressures that collectively control the patterns of amino acid substitutions. These evolutionary pressures are sufficiently consistent over time and across protein families to produce substitution patterns, summarized in global amino acid substitution matrices such as BLOSUM, JTT, WAG, and LG, which can be used to successfully detect homologs, infer phylogenies, and reconstruct ancestral sequences. Although the factors that govern the variation of amino acid substitution rates have received much attention, the influence of thermodynamic stability constraints remains unresolved. Here we develop a simple model to calculate amino acid substitution matrices from evolutionary dynamics controlled by a fitness function that reports on the thermodynamic effects of amino acid mutations in protein structures. This hybrid biophysical and evolutionary model accounts for nucleotide transition/transversion rate bias, multi-nucleotide codon changes, the number of codons per amino acid, and thermodynamic protein stability. We find that our theoretical model accurately recapitulates the complex yet universal pattern observed in common global amino acid substitution matrices used in phylogenetics. These results suggest that selection for thermodynamically stable proteins, coupled with nucleotide mutation bias filtered by the structure of the genetic code, is the primary driver behind the global amino acid substitution patterns observed in proteins throughout the tree of life.

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