4.8 Article

Multicopy suppression underpins metabolic evolvability

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 24, Issue 12, Pages 2716-2722

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msm204

Keywords

catalytic promiscuity; directed evolution; multicopy suppression; substrate ambiguity

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [T32 GM008490, R01 GM074264, R01GM074264, R01 GM074264-03] Funding Source: Medline

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Our understanding of the origins of new metabolic functions is based upon anecdotal genetic and biochemical evidence. Some auxotrophies can be suppressed by overexpressing substrate-ambiguous enzymes (i.e., those that catalyze the same chemical transformation on different substrates). Other enzymes exhibit weak but detectable catalytic promiscuity in vitro (i.e., they catalyze different transformations on similar substrates). Cells adapt to novel environments through the evolution of these secondary activities, but neither their chemical natures nor their frequencies of occurrence have been characterized en bloc. Here, we systematically identified multifunctional genes within the Escherichia coli genome. We screened 104 single-gene knockout strains and discovered that many (20%) of these auxotrophs were rescued by the overexpression of at least one noncognate E. coli gene. The deleted gene and its suppressor were generally unrelated, suggesting that promiscuity is a product of contingency. This genome-wide survey demonstrates that multifunctional genes are common and illustrates the mechanistic diversity by which their products enhance metabolic robustness and evolvability.

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