4.7 Article

Host diversification is concurrent with linear motif evolution in a Mastadenovirus hub protein

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 434, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2022.167563

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica [PICT 2012-2550, PICT 2015-1213, PICT 2013-1895, PICT 2017-1924]
  2. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas [PIP 2014-2016 11220130100558CO]
  3. EIPOD fellowship from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory

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The evolution of Mastadenovirus involves cospeciation, duplication, host switch, and partial extinction events. The fast turnover of linear motifs in the E1A protein suggests rapid changes in virus-host protein-protein interactions. The association between host diversification events and the evolution of E1A linear motifs highlights the adaptive evolution of Mastadenovirus.
Over one hundred Mastadenovirus types infect seven orders of mammals. Virus-host coevolution may involve cospeciation, duplication, host switch and partial extinction events. We reconstruct Mastadenovirus diversification, finding that while cospeciation is dominant, the other three events are also common in Mastadenovirus evolution. Linear motifs are fast-evolving protein functional elements and key mediators of virus-host interactions, thus likely to partake in adaptive viral evolution. We study the evolution of eleven linear motifs in the Mastadenovirus E1A protein, a hub of virus-host protein-protein interactions, in the context of host diversification. The reconstruction of linear motif gain and loss events shows fast linear motif turnover, corresponding a virus-host protein-protein interaction turnover orders of magnitude faster than in model host proteomes. Evolution of E1A linear motifs is coupled, indicating functional coordination at the protein scale, yet presents motif-specific patterns suggestive of convergent evolution. We report a pervasive association between Mastadenovirus host diversification events and the evolution of E1A linear motifs. Eight of 17 host switches associate with the gain of one linear motif and the loss of four different linear motifs, while five of nine partial extinctions associate with the loss of one linear motif. The specific changes in E1A linear motifs during a host switch or a partial extinction suggest that changes in the host molecular environment lead to modulation of the interactions with the retinoblastoma protein and host transcriptional regulators. Altogether, changes in the linear motif repertoire of a viral hub protein are associated with adaptive evolution events during Mastadenovirus evolution. (C) 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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