An experimental assay of the interactions of amino acids from orthologous sequences shaping a complex fitness landscape.
Victoria O PokusaevaDinara R UsmanovaEkaterina V PutintsevaMaria Lorena Espinar CalvoKaren S SarkisyanAlexander S MishinNatalya S BogatyrevaDmitry N IvankovArseniy V AkopyanSergey Ya AvvakumovInna S PovolotskayaGuillaume J FilionLucas B CareyFyodor A KondrashovPublished in: PLoS genetics (2019)
Characterizing the fitness landscape, a representation of fitness for a large set of genotypes, is key to understanding how genetic information is interpreted to create functional organisms. Here we determined the evolutionarily-relevant segment of the fitness landscape of His3, a gene coding for an enzyme in the histidine synthesis pathway, focusing on combinations of amino acid states found at orthologous sites of extant species. Just 15% of amino acids found in yeast His3 orthologues were always neutral while the impact on fitness of the remaining 85% depended on the genetic background. Furthermore, at 67% of sites, amino acid replacements were under sign epistasis, having both strongly positive and negative effect in different genetic backgrounds. 46% of sites were under reciprocal sign epistasis. The fitness impact of amino acid replacements was influenced by only a few genetic backgrounds but involved interaction of multiple sites, shaping a rugged fitness landscape in which many of the shortest paths between highly fit genotypes are inaccessible.