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Functional molecular evolution of a GTP sensing kinase: PI5P4Kβ.

Koh TakeuchiMiki SendaYoshiki IkedaKoji OkuwakiKaori FukuzawaSo NakagawaMika SasakiAtsuo T SasakiToshiya Senda
Published in: The FEBS journal (2023)
Over 4 billion years of evolution, multiple mutations, including nucleotide substitutions, gene and genome duplications, and recombination, have established de novo genes that translate into proteins with novel properties essential for high-order cellular functions. However, molecular processes through which a protein evolutionarily acquires a novel function are mostly speculative. Recently, we have provided evidence for a potential evolutionary mechanism underlying how, in mammalian cells, phosphatidylinositol 5-phosphate 4-kinase β (PI5P4Kβ) evolved into a GTP sensor from ATP-utilizing kinase. Mechanistically, PI5P4Kβ has acquired the guanine efficient association (GEA) motif by mutating its nucleotide base recognition sequence, enabling the evolutionary transition from an ATP-dependent kinase to a distinct GTP/ATP dual kinase with its K M for GTP falling into physiological GTP concentrations-the genesis of GTP sensing activity. Importantly, the GTP sensing activity of PI5P4Kβ is critical for the manifestation of cellular metabolism and tumorigenic activity in the multicellular organism. The combination of structural, biochemical, and biophysical analyses used in our study provides a novel framework for analyzing how a protein can evolutionarily acquire a novel activity, which potentially introduces a critical function to the cell.
Keyphrases
  • protein kinase
  • genome wide
  • tyrosine kinase
  • stem cells
  • dna damage
  • oxidative stress
  • protein protein
  • single molecule
  • bone marrow
  • small molecule
  • human health
  • binding protein
  • genome wide analysis