Selection for Protein Kinetic Stability Connects Denaturation Temperatures to Organismal Temperatures and Provides Clues to Archaean Life
Metadatos
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Romero Romero, María Luisa; Risso, Valeria Alejandra; Martínez Rodríguez, Sergio; Gaucher, Eric A.; Ibarra Molero, Beatriz; Sánchez Ruiz, José ManuelEditorial
Public Library of Science
Fecha
2016-06-02Referencia bibliográfica
Romero-Romero ML, Risso VA, Martinez- Rodriguez S, Gaucher EA, Ibarra-Molero B, Sanchez-Ruiz JM (2016) Selection for Protein Kinetic Stability Connects Denaturation Temperatures to Organismal Temperatures and Provides Clues to Archaean Life. PLoS ONE 11(6): e0156657. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0156657
Patrocinador
Departamento de Quimica Fisica, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Granada, 18071, Granada, Spain; Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Biology, School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Biosciences, Atlanta, Georgia, 30332, United States of AmericaResumen
The relationship between the denaturation temperatures of proteins (Tm values) and the living
temperatures of their host organisms (environmental temperatures: TENV values) is
poorly understood. Since different proteins in the same organism may show widely different
Tm’s, no simple universal relationship between Tm and TENV should hold, other than
Tm TENV. Yet, when analyzing a set of homologous proteins from different hosts, Tm’s are
oftentimes found to correlate with TENV’s but this correlation is shifted upward on the Tm
axis. Supporting this trend, we recently reported Tm’s for resurrected Precambrian thioredoxins
that mirror a proposed environmental cooling over long geological time, while
remaining a shocking ~50°C above the proposed ancestral ocean temperatures. Here, we
show that natural selection for protein kinetic stability (denaturation rate) can produce a
Tm$TENV correlation with a large upward shift in Tm. A model for protein stability evolution
suggests a link between the Tm shift and the in vivo lifetime of a protein and, more specifically,
allows us to estimate ancestral environmental temperatures from experimental denaturation
rates for resurrected Precambrian thioredoxins. The TENV values thus obtained
match the proposed ancestral ocean cooling, support comparatively high Archaean temperatures,
and are consistent with a recent proposal for the environmental temperature (above
75°C) that hosted the last universal common ancestor. More generally, this work provides a
framework for understanding how features of protein stability reflect the environmental temperatures
of the host organisms.