Phenotypic comparisons of consensus variants versus laboratory resurrections of Precambrian proteins
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Risso, Valeria Alejandra; Gavira Gallardo, José Antonio; Gaucher, Eric A.; Sánchez Ruiz, José ManuelEditorial
Wiley
Date
2014-04-08Referencia bibliográfica
Risso, V.A., Gavira, J.A., Gaucher, E.A. and Sanchez-Ruiz, J.M. (2014), Phenotypic comparisons of consensus variants versus laboratory resurrections of Precambrian proteins. Proteins, 82: 887-896. https://doi.org/10.1002/prot.24575
Abstract
Consensus-sequence engineering has generated protein variants with enhanced stability, and sometimes, with modulated
biological function. Consensus mutations are often interpreted as the introduction of ancestral amino acid residues. However,
the precise relationship between consensus engineering and ancestral protein resurrection is not fully understood.
Here, we report the properties of proteins encoded by consensus sequences derived from a multiple sequence alignment of
extant, class A b-lactamases, as compared with the properties of ancient Precambrian b-lactamases resurrected in the laboratory.
These comparisons considered primary sequence, secondary, and tertiary structure, as well as stability and catalysis
against different antibiotics. Out of the three consensus variants generated, one could not be expressed and purified (likely
due to misfolding and/or low stability) and only one displayed substantial stability having substrate promiscuity, although
to a lower extent than ancient b-lactamases. These results: (i) highlight the phenotypic differences between consensus variants
and laboratory resurrections of ancestral proteins; (ii) question interpretations of consensus proteins as phenotypic
proxies of ancestral proteins; and (iii) support the notion that ancient proteins provide a robust approach toward the preparation
of protein variants having large numbers of mutational changes while possessing unique biomolecular properties.