Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0010047
Title: Entropic stabilization of proteins and its proteomic consequences
Authors: Berezovsky I.N. 
Chen W.W.
Choi P.J. 
Shakhnovich E.I.
Keywords: aminopeptidase
arginine
cytochrome c
hydrolase H
lysine
proteinase
proteome
article
biology
chemistry
computer simulation
entropy
enzyme stability
enzymology
Escherichia coli
genetics
genome
metabolism
Monte Carlo method
mutation
protein folding
proteomics
temperature
Thermus thermophilus
Aminopeptidases
Arginine
Computational Biology
Computer Simulation
Cytochromes c
Endopeptidases
Entropy
Enzyme Stability
Escherichia coli
Genome
Lysine
Monte Carlo Method
Mutation
Protein Folding
Proteome
Proteomics
Temperature
Thermus thermophilus
Issue Date: 2005
Citation: Berezovsky I.N., Chen W.W., Choi P.J., Shakhnovich E.I. (2005). Entropic stabilization of proteins and its proteomic consequences. PLoS Computational Biology 1 (4) : 322-332. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0010047
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Evolutionary traces of thermophilic adaptation are manifest, on the whole-genome level, in compositional biases toward certain types of amino acids. However, it is sometimes difficult to discern their causes without a clear understanding of underlying physical mechanisms of thermal stabilization of proteins. For example, it is well-known that hyperthermophiles feature a greater proportion of charged residues, but, surprisingly, the excess of positively charged residues is almost entirely due to lysines but not arginines in the majority of hyperthermophilic genomes. All-atom simulations show that lysines have a much greater number of accessible rotamers than arginines of similar degree of burial in folded states of proteins. This finding suggests that lysines would preferentially entropically stabilize the native state. Indeed, we show in computational experiments that arginine-to-lysine amino acid substitutions result in noticeable stabilization of proteins. We then hypothesize that if evolution uses this physical mechanism as a complement to electrostatic stabilization in its strategies of thermophilic adaptation, then hyperthermostable organisms would have much greater content of lysines in their proteomes than comparably sized and similarly charged arginines. Consistent with that, high-throughput comparative analysis of complete proteomes shows extremely strong bias toward arginine-to-lysine replacement in hyperthermophilic organisms and overall much greater content of lysines than arginines in hyperthermophiles. This finding cannot be explained by genomic GC compositional biases or by the universal trend of amino acid gain and loss in protein evolution. We discovered here a novel entropic mechanism of protein thermostability due to residual dynamics of rotamer isomerization in native state and demonstrated its immediate proteomic implications. Our study provides an example of how analysis of a fundamental physical mechanism of thermostability helps to resolve a puzzle in comparative genomics as to why amino acid compositions of hyperthermophilic proteomes are significantly biased toward lysines but not similarly charged arginines. ? 2005 Berezovsky et al.
Source Title: PLoS Computational Biology
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/161877
ISSN: 1553734X
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.0010047
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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