Evolution of multifunctionality through a pleiotropic substitution in the innate immune protein S100A9

先天免疫蛋白S100A9的多效性替换导致多功能性的进化

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作者:Joseph L Harman ,Andrea N Loes ,Gus D Warren ,Maureen C Heaphy ,Kirsten J Lampi ,Michael J Harms

Abstract

Multifunctional proteins are evolutionary puzzles: how do proteins evolve to satisfy multiple functional constraints? S100A9 is one such multifunctional protein. It potently amplifies inflammation via Toll-like receptor four and is antimicrobial as part of a heterocomplex with S100A8. These two functions are seemingly regulated by proteolysis: S100A9 is readily degraded, while S100A8/S100A9 is resistant. We take an evolutionary biochemical approach to show that S100A9 evolved both functions and lost proteolytic resistance from a weakly proinflammatory, proteolytically resistant amniote ancestor. We identify a historical substitution that has pleiotropic effects on S100A9 proinflammatory activity and proteolytic resistance but has little effect on S100A8/S100A9 antimicrobial activity. We thus propose that mammals evolved S100A8/S100A9 antimicrobial and S100A9 proinflammatory activities concomitantly with a proteolytic 'timer' to selectively regulate S100A9. This highlights how the same mutation can have pleiotropic effects on one functional state of a protein but not another, thus facilitating the evolution of multifunctionality. Keywords: ancestral sequence reconstruction; antimicrobial activity; biochemistry; chemical biology; evolutionary biology; inflammation; mammals; none; pleiotropy; protein evolution.

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