4.3 Article

Amino Acid Specificity of Ancestral Aminoacyl-tRNA Synthetase Prior to the Last Universal Common Ancestor Commonote commonote

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION
Volume 90, Issue 1, Pages 73-94

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00239-021-10043-z

Keywords

Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase; Phylogenetic analysis; Ancestral sequence reconstruction; Amino acid repertoire

Funding

  1. MEXT KAKENHI [JP17H05236, JP20H02018]
  2. Special program to support large scale research of Waseda University
  3. Astrobiology Center Program of the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) [AB271002, AB312004, AB022003]

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This study generated a composite phylogenetic tree for seven aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARSs) and predicted the ancestral ARS sequences and amino acid specificity before the evolution of the last universal common ancestor. The results showed that the ancestral ARSs had substantial amino acid specificity and that the number of amino acid types aminoacylated by proteinaceous ARSs was limited before the appearance of a fuller range of proteinaceous ARS species.
Extant organisms commonly use 20 amino acids in protein synthesis. In the translation system, aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase (ARS) selectively binds an amino acid and transfers it to the cognate tRNA. It is postulated that the amino acid repertoire of ARS expanded during the development of the translation system. In this study we generated composite phylogenetic trees for seven ARSs (SerRS, ProRS, ThrRS, GlyRS-1, HisRS, AspRS, and LysRS) which are thought to have diverged by gene duplication followed by mutation, before the evolution of the last universal common ancestor. The composite phylogenetic tree shows that the AspRS/LysRS branch diverged from the other five ARSs at the deepest node, with the GlyRS/HisRS branch and the other three ARSs (ThrRS, ProRS and SerRS) diverging at the second deepest node. ThrRS diverged next, and finally ProRS and SerRS diverged from each other. Based on the phylogenetic tree, sequences of the ancestral ARSs prior to the evolution of the last universal common ancestor were predicted. The amino acid specificity of each ancestral ARS was then postulated by comparison with amino acid recognition sites of ARSs of extant organisms. Our predictions demonstrate that ancestral ARSs had substantial specificity and that the number of amino acid types amino-acylated by proteinaceous ARSs was limited before the appearance of a fuller range of proteinaceous ARS species. From an assumption that 10 amino acid species are required for folding and function, proteinaceous ARS possibly evolved in a translation system composed of preexisting ribozyme ARSs, before the evolution of the last universal common ancestor.

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