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Deciphering Protein Evolution
The Scientist ^ | Nov 26, 2001 | Barry A. Palevitz

Posted on 01/14/2002 3:02:24 PM PST by Karl_Lembke

Deciphering Protein Evolution

Actin shares a common ancestor with a bacterial protein

By Barry A. Palevitz

One of the enduring questions in biology is how eukaryotic cells arose from prokaryotic ancestors at least 2 billion years ago. Besides differences in genome organization, eukaryotic animals, plants, and fungi possess a much higher degree of cellular compartmentation in the form of membrane bound organelles than their distant bacterial and Archaean cousins. But how did such a plethora of cellular domains, each with a discrete role in metabolism, evolve?

To the extent that science proves anything, it answered the question for two eukaryotic organelles a long time ago. Mitochondria and chloroplasts evolved from endosymbiotic associations between an ancestral host cell and smaller prokaryotic partners. In the case of chloroplasts, the symbiont was a photosynthetic cyanobacterium; for mitochondria, most likely it was ana-proteobacterium.

The cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells is like chicken soup-it's chock full of organelles suspended like chunks of assorted vegetables and noodles in cytosolic broth. The broth also contains filaments of various dimensions that collectively comprise the cell's cytoskeleton. Like the bones of a large animal, the cytoskeleton provides a structural framework lending shape to cells and against which enzymatic 'muscles' work to elicit movement. That's how amoebae migrate, algae swim, stem cells divide, and cytoplasm streams relentlessly up, down, and across plant cells.

While the cytoskeleton is as much a hallmark of eukaryoticity as any mitochondrion or chloroplast, the origin of its filaments in deep time is more mysterious. Biologists assumed that genes for cytoskeletal proteins arose from prokaryotic precursors, but evidence in favor of the hypothesis was scarce, until recently.

Tubulin First on Stage

Microtubules comprise one component of the cytoskeleton responsible for a variety of movements including mitosis and meiosis. The 25 nm tubes consist of dimerica- and b-tubulin subunits that share about 40 percent sequence homology. Another form,y-tubulin, functions in microtubule formation.

But where did microtubules come from? It now appears that tubulins share a common ancestor with a protein called FtsZ, a key player in bacterial cell division.1 FtsZ is also present in plants, where it functions in chloroplast division,2 and a similar protein associates with mitochondria, at least in one alga.3 FtsZ polymerizes into filaments in the test tube in a process dependent on GTP. The same nucleotide is required for tubulin assembly into microtubules.1

Tubulins and FtsZ are clearly related, judging from similarities in three-dimensional structure. And although the proteins share only about 15 percent amino acid sequence identity overall, they're much more similar at the local level, particularly at the domain responsible for binding and cleaving GTP.4,5

Actin Into the Fold

Like the tubulins, actin-another essential component of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton-is a globular protein that binds nucleotide, in this case ATP. As actin monomers polymerize into 6-nm-wide microfilaments consisting of two helically wound protofilaments, the ATP, situated in a deep enzymatic cleft between two halves of the protein, hydrolyzes to ADP and inorganic phosphate.

It turns out that actin shares its ATPase domain with a family of proteins including hexokinase, the enzymatic kick starter of glycolysis, and several bacterial proteins. One of them is called MreB, a protein essential for generating or maintaining the rod shape of many bacteria. By examining structural similarities between eukaryotic actin and MreB from Thermotoga maritima, a research team at the Medical Research Council in Cambridge, England recently concluded that the two proteins are more closely related to each other than to other members of the family and undoubtedly share a common ancestor.6

The group showed that the three-dimensional shapes of actin and MreB are so similar they can be superimposed. The analogy with tubulin/FtsZ goes even further. Both proteins share considerable amino acid homology at several key sequences surrounding the ATP binding site, again situated deep in a cleft between two halves of the folded polypeptide chain.

Under the right conditions, MreB polymerizes into protofilaments that pair up lengthwise. The protein subunits are spaced about the same distance apart along the filaments as in polymeric actin, but MreB double filaments aren't nearly as helical.

The similarity between MreB and actin doesn't stop at structure and sequence. In a paper published earlier in 2001, a research group led by Jeffrey Errington at the University of Oxford, U.K. visualized MreB in the rod shaped cells of Bacillus subtilis using fluorescence and electron microscopy.7 MreB forms filamentous bands that encircle the cell in low helices, like reinforcing hoops. In an essay accompanying the Cambridge group's article, Duke University cell biologist Harold Erickson calculated that each band contains 10 protofilaments.8

When Errington's team genetically deprived cells of functional MreB, they became spherical. A search of genome databases showed that MreB is present in bacteria with nonspherical shapes, including rods. It's absent in spherical cocci. In other words, MreB has a cytoskeletal function. "I think it is quite convincing that MreB is the actin progenitor," says Erickson. "A key step, still unknown, going from bacteria to vertebrates is to develop a mechanism to make the double-helical actin filament from the single MreB protofilament structure."

More Acts to Follow

The story doesn't end with MreB; there's more to find out. Scientists want to know if MreB is also present in eukaryotes-associated with mitochondria and chloroplasts-as is FtsZ. According to Katherine Osteryoung, a plant biologist at Michigan State University in East Lansing who identified two FtsZ genes in the mustard plant Arabidopsis,2 "there's no obvious indication of MreB in plants that I've found or am aware of."

Actin normally functions along with the motor enzyme myosin to produce cellular motion, while microtubules utilize two other motor families called dynein and kinesin related proteins. Researchers now wonder whether MreB and FtsZ work in conjunction with bacterial motors. According to Erickson, "none have been turned up in genetic screens for cell division (or other activities), and none have been identified by sequence gazing. My bet is that kinesin and myosin evolved in eukaryotes, after the evolution of microtubules and eukaryotic actin filaments."

Still, Osteryoung is pleased with the latest results: "To someone interested in these issues, establishment of the prokaryotic origins of two major eukaryotic cytoskeletal proteins is enormously satisfying. I look forward to the day when evolutionary intermediates... from MreB to actin and FtsZ to tubulin, perhaps awaiting discovery in some obscure and primitive eukaryote, will more fully reveal the evolutionary steps by which key components of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton acquired their present-day structures and functions."

Barry A. Palevitz (palevitz@dogwood.botany.uga.edu) is a contributing editor for The Scientist.

References

  1. H.P. Erickson, "FtsZ, a tubulin homologue in prokaryotic cell division," Trends in Cell Biology, 7:362-7, 1997.
  2. K.W. Osteryoung, "Organelle fission: Crossing the evolutionary divide," Plant Physiology, 123:1213-6, 2000.
  3. P.L. Beech et al., "Mitochondrial FtsZ in a chromophyte alga," Science, 287:1276-9, 2000.
  4. E. Nogales et al., "Structure of the alpha-beta tubulin dimer by electron crystallography," Nature, 391:199-203, 1998.
  5. J. Lowe, L.A. Amos, "Crystal structure of the bacterial cell-division protein FtsZ," Nature, 391:203-6, 1998.
  6. F. Van den Ent et al., "Prokaryotic origin of the actin cytoskeleton," Nature, 413:39-44, Sept. 2, 2001.
  7. L.J.F. Jones et al., "Control of cell shape in bacteria: helical, actin-like filaments in Bacillus subtilis," Cell, 104:913-22, 2001.
  8. H.P. Erickson, "Evolution in bacteria," Nature, 413:30, Sept. 6, 2001.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: crevolist; evolution
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To: balrog666
Look at the record, all I did is respond in kind.

Anotrher example of your inability to retain simple fact or adhere to reality.

Look at the record. You will see your comment in response to mine.

And again, you avoid the subject like the plague. The topic is evolution and biology.

When you know nothing about it it is of course easier for you to avoid the issue.

81 posted on 01/15/2002 6:03:18 PM PST by tallhappy
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To: tallhappy
And again, you avoid the subject like the plague.

What subject, your ad hominem attacks?
Check again, this hasn't been a discussion of biology for some time.
82 posted on 01/15/2002 6:14:59 PM PST by balrog666
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To: balrog666
this hasn't been a discussion of biology for some time.

Which is certainly not my fault.

All these posts end up not being about biology because the people participating don't know anything about it and are arguing theology, not biology.

83 posted on 01/15/2002 6:21:25 PM PST by tallhappy
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To: tallhappy
All these posts end up not being about biology because the people participating don't know anything about it and are arguing theology, not biology.

All such discussions are inherently based on belief systems and that will never change. However, we aren't all cutting edge researchers attempting to study protein evolution from a perspective of a billion years but that doesn't mean we can't understand the meaning of such research or discuss it intelligently.
84 posted on 01/15/2002 6:28:35 PM PST by balrog666
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To: balrog666
All such discussions are inherently based on belief systems and that will never change.

No. Discussions of science are about science.

However, we aren't all cutting edge researchers attempting to study protein evolution from a perspective of a billion years but that doesn't mean we can't understand the meaning of such research or discuss it intelligently.

One would think so. In theory what you say is true.

But there is no data to support it.

Hasn't happened here yet except for very rare occurances, most likely anamolous.

85 posted on 01/15/2002 6:39:30 PM PST by tallhappy
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To: tallhappy
One would think so. In theory what you say is true. But there is no data to support it. Hasn't happened here yet except for very rare occurances, most likely anamolous.

Oops, you misspelled "anomalous". Should we diverge into a discussion about grammar or a spelling quiz? I don't think so, but that's not how you responded some 70 posts ago. Whatever shall we do now?

Looks pretty foolish now, doesn't it? /gratuitous poking
86 posted on 01/15/2002 6:46:24 PM PST by balrog666
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To: tallhappy
At least he is TALKING to you now, instead of merely snarling insults laced with coarse vocabulary. I hope we have a breakthrough here.
87 posted on 01/15/2002 6:50:35 PM PST by Ahban
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To: Ahban
At least he is TALKING to you now, instead of merely snarling insults laced with coarse vocabulary. I hope we have a breakthrough here.

Yes, and immediately after my first post to you, I realized that I should have posted an example to show why you were wrong rather than dump on you. Sorry about that.
Anyway, my bed it calling and I have to go. See you around :^)
88 posted on 01/15/2002 7:04:10 PM PST by balrog666
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To: balrog666
Your insight is underwhelming.

I often misspell words with an o sound -- like anomalous as anomolous or phosphatase as phosphotase.

I also misspell when writing fast or in cramped settings. To me that is of little consequence.

How come you didn't answer the question about divergent vs convergent evolution? Did you not know? Have you ever taken a biology class or class on evolution?

89 posted on 01/15/2002 7:06:14 PM PST by tallhappy
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Comment #90 Removed by Moderator

Comment #91 Removed by Moderator

To: tallhappy
How come you didn't answer the question about divergent vs convergent evolution?

Several reasons:
1) I was busy watching Ken Burns' disappointing "Mark Twain" at the time,
2) the question itself was poorly stated, and
3) the question was irrelevant to the discussion.

The article was quite clear that the author presupposed divergent evolution in his approach to his research, so what was the point of reposting the same point simply to prove to you that I had read the article, particularly when you were making no points worthy of a rebuttal?
92 posted on 01/16/2002 7:01:44 AM PST by balrog666
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To: balrog666
I take it that you didn't know.

The question arises, what do people believe and why?

93 posted on 01/16/2002 9:16:57 AM PST by tallhappy
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To: tallhappy
I take it that you didn't know.

You are free to take it any way you want.

The question arises, what do people believe and why?

No, it doesn't.

But that raises the question in my mind of why you continue to post here if you have nothing to say?
94 posted on 01/16/2002 10:35:00 AM PST by balrog666
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To: balrog666
I am talking about biology and evolutionary thought.

You are free to take it any way you want.

You are free to be clear.

You come on and make an overbearing arrogant comment. So I call you on it.

I never understand why people are so bombastic and self-righteous on the subject to, and above and beyond, the point of rude arrogance, yet then demonstrate they have no or little knowledge or understanding of biology or evolution itself.

It makes me wonder where the strong fundamentalist belief in evolution comes from.

It can't be based on scientific examination because the knowledge and understanding of the field is not there.

My hypothesis is that it comes more from a religious belief, or what can be seen as an anti-religious belief. It seems in a lot of cases the basis for an adherence (dogmatic) is more that the person simply doesn't believe in creation myths or the theology associated with it and uses what is actually a scientific discipline or paradigm as a substitute creation myth.

95 posted on 01/16/2002 10:55:36 AM PST by tallhappy
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To: tallhappy
I am talking about biology

You have said nothing about biology yet - that was my point.

...and evolutionary thought.

You are being unclear again. Do you mean "thoughts about evolution" or "evolution of thoughts" or something else entirely?

You are free to be clear.

I thought I was being clear. Why not interpret everything I write literally? That would save us both time.

You come on and make an overbearing arrogant comment. So I call you on it.

Back at ya, buddy!

I never understand why people are so bombastic and self-righteous on the subject to, and above and beyond, the point of rude arrogance, yet then demonstrate they have no or little knowledge or understanding of biology or evolution itself.

Really? What has one to do with the other? I think we've all known blowhards who try to browbeat people with their "superior knowledge" and who only end up demonstrating the rigidity of their point-of-view or the closed nature of their mind.

It makes me wonder where the strong fundamentalist belief in evolution comes from.

Strong? Fundamentalist? Belief? It's a working theory without significant scientific competition. If you have a better explanation for us, please share it.

It can't be based on scientific examination because the knowledge and understanding of the field is not there.

If it's a belief (or faith, if you prefer), it doesn't need knowledge or understanding. Perhaps that explains your confusion. On the other hand, as I pointed out earlier, cutting-edge knowledge is not a requirement to understand either the facts resulting from the research or their implications within a larger debate about evolution.

My hypothesis is that it comes more from a religious belief, or what can be seen as an anti-religious belief. It seems in a lot of cases the basis for an adherence (dogmatic) is more that the person simply doesn't believe in creation myths or the theology associated with it and uses what is actually a scientific discipline or paradigm as a substitute creation myth.

It could be interpretted that way. I would use the term "areligious" rather than anti-religious but it all depends on your point of view.
96 posted on 01/16/2002 11:40:18 AM PST by balrog666
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To: balrog666
It could be interpretted that way.

OK.

97 posted on 01/16/2002 12:05:15 PM PST by tallhappy
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To: tallhappy
Is the topic of this an article an example of what is known as divergent evolution or convergent evolution?

The overall topic (microfilament evolution) is divergent evolution, but they discuss some convergent evolution (endosymbiotic theory) as well.

98 posted on 01/16/2002 12:12:59 PM PST by Come get it
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To: Come get it; lexcorp
Very good. Extra credit for the comment on the convergent evolution sub-topic in the article.

See lexcorp's answer in 18 ( here) to see an example of a very bad answer.

Why is it the people who know the least are the most dogmatic and overbearing and rude on the subject?

99 posted on 01/16/2002 12:20:02 PM PST by tallhappy
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To: onedoug; HeadOn; all
Re: intelligent design

I believe 100% that God exists and that He is my Savior and Creator, however, I'm not 100% sure HOW He did what He did. We will never know for sure, because if we did, faith could not exist.

I try to avoid supporting one theory over another simply because there is not enough concrete evidence to support one over the other. There is plenty of evidence to support micro-evolution, but there is no evidence for macro-evolution. I believe that evolution occurs on a small scale (birds evolved from other birds, etc.), but I can't believe that one type of animal could evolve into another.

I think I'll wait until someone can prove beyond all doubt EXACTLY HOW we got here. Until then, I'll be following the path God has set before me. I would rather be on the safe side.

If I'm wrong, and God doesn't exist, when I die I will simply cease to exist. I can't be disappointed because I am non-existent. However, if I'm right, and God DOES exist, where does that leave all those who decided to turn their backs on Him? I'll let you guys think about that one.

100 posted on 01/16/2002 12:39:34 PM PST by Come get it
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