4.5 Article

Experimental and In Silico Analysis of TEM β-Lactamase Adaptive Evolution

Journal

ACS INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 8, Issue 12, Pages 2451-2463

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.2c002162451

Keywords

evolution; fitness landscape; epistasis; contingency; selection; antibiotic resistance

Funding

  1. Generalitat Valenciana
  2. European Social Fund
  3. NSF-Advances in Biological Informatics award [S0183542]
  4. [APOSTD/2020/120]

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This study investigates the role of epistasis in genetic adaptation using the evolution of cefotaxime resistance in TEM-1 beta-lactamase variants as a model. The results demonstrate that gain-of-function mutations are enriched in sign and reciprocal sign epistasis, which can be inferred solely based on sequence data. Additionally, there is a significant relationship between epistasis and the structural and dynamic coupling of protein positions.
phenotypic effects. Epistasis is of fundamental biological relevance but is not well understood mechanistically. Adaptive evolution, i.e., the evolution of new biochemical activities, is rich in epistatic interactions. To better understand the principles underlying epistasis during genetic adaptation, we studied the evolution of TEM-1 beta-lactamase variants exhibiting cefotaxime resistance. We report the collection of a library of 487 observed evolutionary trajectories for TEM-1 and determine the epistasis status based on cefotaxime resistance phenotype for 206 combinations of 2-3 TEM-1 mutations involving 17 positions under adaptive selective pressure. Gain-of-function (GOF) mutations are gatekeepers for adaptation. To see if GOF phenotypes can be inferred based solely on sequence data, we calculated the enrichment of GOF mutations in the different categories of epistatic pairs. Our results suggest that this is possible because GOF mutations are particularly enriched in sign and reciprocal sign epistasis, which leave a major imprint on the sequence space accessible to evolution. We also used FoldX to explore the relationship between thermodynamic stability and epistasis. We found that mutations in observed evolutionary trajectories tend to destabilize the folded structure of the protein, albeit their cumulative effects are consistently below the protein's free energy of folding. The destabilizing effect is stronger for epistatic pairs, suggesting that modest or local alterations in folding stability can modulate catalysis. Finally, we report a significant relationship between epistasis and the degree to which two protein positions are structurally and dynamically coupled, even in the absence of ligand.

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