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Ancestral sequence reconstruction - An underused approach to understand the evolution of gene function in plants?

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL AND STRUCTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages 1579-1594

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2021.03.008

Keywords

Ancestral sequence reconstruction; Evolution; Genomics; Metabolism; Phylogenetics; Plants

Funding

  1. EU [739582, 664620]
  2. Max-Planck Society

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Ancestral proteins were more promiscuous than modern ones, with specificity often evolving after gene duplication; some modern proteins are found to have evolved de novo from ancestors lacking those functions; new interactions evolved from just a few mutations, suggesting acquisition of new functions is not difficult but often lost to subsequent mutations.
Whilst substantial research effort has been placed on understanding the interactions of plant proteins with their molecular partners, relatively few studies in plants - by contrast to work in other organisms - address how these interactions evolve. It is thought that ancestral proteins were more promiscuous than modern proteins and that specificity often evolved following gene duplication and subsequent functional refining. However, ancestral protein resurrection studies have found that some modern proteins have evolved de novo from ancestors lacking those functions. Intriguingly, the new interactions evolved as a consequence of just a few mutations and, as such, acquisition of new functions appears to be neither difficult nor rare, however, only a few of them are incorporated into biological processes before they are lost to subsequent mutations. Here, we detail the approach of ancestral sequence reconstruction (ASR), providing a primer to reconstruct the sequence of an ancestral gene. We will present case studies from a range of different eukaryotes before discussing the few instances where ancestral reconstructions have been used in plants. As ASR is used to dig into the remote evolutionary past, we will also present some alternative genetic approaches to investigate molecular evolution on shorter timescales. We argue that the study of plant secondary metabolism is particularly well suited for ancestral reconstruction studies. Indeed, its ancient evolutionary roots and highly diverse landscape provide an ideal context in which to address the focal issue around the emergence of evolutionary novelties and how this affects the chemical diversification of plant metabolism. (C) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Research Network of Computational and Structural Biotechnology.

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