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Low protein expression enhances phenotypic evolvability by intensifying selection on folding stability.

Shraddha KarvePouria DasmehJia ZhengAndreas Wagner
Published in: Nature ecology & evolution (2022)
Protein abundance affects the evolution of protein genotypes, but we do not know how it affects the evolution of protein phenotypes. Here we investigate the role of protein abundance in the evolvability of green fluorescent protein (GFP) towards the novel phenotype of cyan fluorescence. We evolve GFP in E. coli through multiple cycles of mutation and selection and show that low GFP expression facilitates the evolution of cyan fluorescence. A computational model whose predictions we test experimentally helps explain why: lowly expressed proteins are under stronger selection for proper folding, which facilitates their evolvability on short evolutionary time scales. The reason is that high fluorescence can be achieved by either few proteins that fold well or by many proteins that fold less well. In other words, we observe a synergy between a protein's scarcity and its stability. Because many proteins meet the essential requirements for this scarcity-stability synergy, it may be a widespread mechanism by which low expression helps proteins evolve new phenotypes and functions.
Keyphrases
  • binding protein
  • single molecule
  • protein protein
  • poor prognosis
  • amino acid
  • escherichia coli
  • gene expression
  • small molecule
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • genome wide