Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2185774 | Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010 | 11 Pages |
The evolution of the prototypical (βα)8-barrel protein imidazole glycerol phosphate synthase (HisF) was studied by complementary computational and experimental approaches. The 4-fold symmetry of HisF suggested that its constituting (βα)2 quarter-barrels have a common evolutionary origin. This conclusion was supported by the computational reconstruction of the HisF sequence of the last common ancestor, which showed that its quarter-barrels were more similar to each other than are those of extant HisF proteins. A comprehensive sequence analysis identified HisF-N1 [corresponding to (βα)1–2] as the slowest evolving quarter-barrel. This finding indicated that it is the closest relative of the common (βα)2 predecessor, which must have been a stable and presumably tetrameric protein. In accordance with this prediction, a recombinantly produced HisF-N1 protein was properly folded and formed a tetramer being stabilised by disulfide bonds. The introduction of a disulfide bond in HisF-C1 [corresponding to (βα)5–6] also resulted in the formation of a stable tetramer. The fusion of two identical HisF-N1 quarter-barrels yielded the stable dimeric half-barrel HisF-N1N1. Our findings suggest a two-step evolutionary pathway in which a HisF-N1-like predecessor was duplicated and fused twice to yield HisF. Most likely, the (βα)2 quarter-barrel and (βα)4 half-barrel intermediates on this pathway were stabilised by disulfide bonds that became dispensable upon consolidation of the (βα)8-barrel.