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result(s) for
"Metabolic pathway evolution"
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Relaxation of tyrosine pathway regulation underlies the evolution of betalain pigmentation in Caryophyllales
by
Samuel F. Brockington
,
Minmin Wang
,
Ya Yang
in
Amino acids
,
Anthocyanins
,
Anthocyanins - metabolism
2018
Diverse natural products are synthesized in plants by specialized metabolic enzymes, which are often lineage-specific and derived from gene duplication followed by functional divergence. However, little is known about the contribution of primary metabolism to the evolution of specialized metabolic pathways.
Betalain pigments, uniquely found in the plant order Caryophyllales, are synthesized from the aromatic amino acid L-tyrosine (Tyr) and replaced the otherwise ubiquitous phenylalanine-derived anthocyanins. This study combined biochemical, molecular and phylogenetic analyses, and uncovered coordinated evolution of Tyr and betalain biosynthetic pathways in Caryophyllales.
We found that Beta vulgaris, which produces high concentrations of betalains, synthesizes Tyr via plastidic arogenate dehydrogenases (TyrAa/ADH) encoded by two ADH genes (BvADHα and BvADHβ). Unlike BvADHβ and other plant ADHs that are strongly inhibited by Tyr, BvADHα exhibited relaxed sensitivity to Tyr. Also, Tyr-insensitive BvADHα orthologs arose during the evolution of betalain pigmentation in the core Caryophyllales and later experienced relaxed selection and gene loss in lineages that reverted from betalain to anthocyanin pigmentation, such as Caryophyllaceae.
These results suggest that relaxation of Tyr pathway regulation increased Tyr production and contributed to the evolution of betalain pigmentation, highlighting the significance of upstream primary metabolic regulation for the diversification of specialized plant metabolism.
Journal Article
Drivers of metabolic diversification
by
Nelson, David
,
Duran, Hernando G. Suarez
,
Medema, Marnix H.
in
Biology
,
Biosynthesis
,
biosynthetic gene clusters
2020
• Plants produce an array of specialized metabolites with important ecological functions. The mechanisms underpinning the evolution of new biosynthetic pathways are not well-understood. Here, we exploit available genome sequence resources to investigate triterpene biosynthesis across the Brassicaceae.
• Oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs) catalyze the first committed step in triterpene biosynthesis. Systematic analysis of 13 sequenced Brassicaceae genomes was performed to identify all OSC genes. The genome neighbourhoods (GNs) around a total of 163 OSC genes were investigated to identify Pfam domains significantly enriched in these regions. All-vs-all comparisons of OSC neighbourhoods and phylogenomic analysis were used to investigate the sequence similarity and evolutionary relationships of the numerous candidate triterpene biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs) observed. Functional analysis of three representative BGCs was carried out and their triterpene pathway products were elucidated.
• Our results indicate that plant genomes are remarkably plastic, and that dynamic GNs generate new biosynthetic pathways in different Brassicaceae lineages by shuffling the genes encoding a core palette of triterpene-diversifying enzymes, presumably in response to strong environmental selection pressure.
• These results illuminate a genomic basis for diversification of plant-specialized metabolism through natural combinatorics of enzyme families, which can be mimicked using synthetic biology to engineer diverse bioactive molecules.
Journal Article
Recruitment of a Middling Promiscuous Enzyme Drives Adaptive Metabolic Evolution in Escherichia coli
by
Zorio, Diego A R
,
Campbell, Ryan P
,
Whittington, A Carl
in
Biological evolution
,
Candidates
,
Carbon sources
2023
Abstract
A key step in metabolic pathway evolution is the recruitment of promiscuous enzymes to perform new functions. Despite the recognition that promiscuity is widespread in biology, factors dictating the preferential recruitment of one promiscuous enzyme over other candidates are unknown. Escherichia coli contains four sugar kinases that are candidates for recruitment when the native glucokinase machinery is deleted—allokinase (AlsK), manno(fructo)kinase (Mak), N-acetylmannosamine kinase (NanK), and N-acetylglucosamine kinase (NagK). The catalytic efficiencies of these enzymes are 103- to 105-fold lower than native glucokinases, ranging from 2,400 M−1 s−1 for the most active candidate, NagK, to 15 M−1 s−1 for the least active candidate, AlsK. To investigate the relationship between catalytic activities of promiscuous enzymes and their recruitment, we performed adaptive evolution of a glucokinase-deficient E. coli strain to restore glycolytic metabolism. We observed preferential recruitment of NanK via a trajectory involving early mutations that facilitate glucose uptake and amplify nanK transcription, followed by nonsynonymous substitutions in NanK that enhance the enzyme's promiscuous glucokinase activity. These substitutions reduced the native activity of NanK and reduced organismal fitness during growth on an N-acetylated carbon source, indicating that enzyme recruitment comes at a cost for growth on other substrates. Notably, the two most active candidates, NagK and Mak, were not recruited, suggesting that catalytic activity alone does not dictate evolutionary outcomes. The results highlight our lack of knowledge regarding biological drivers of enzyme recruitment and emphasize the need for a systems-wide approach to identify factors facilitating or constraining this important adaptive process.
Journal Article
In vivo continuous evolution of metabolic pathways for chemical production
2019
Microorganisms have long been used as chemical plant to convert simple substrates into complex molecules. Various metabolic pathways have been optimised over the past few decades, but the progresses were limited due to our finite knowledge on metabolism. Evolution is a knowledge-free genetic randomisation approach, employed to improve the chemical production in microbial cell factories. However, evolution of large, complex pathway was a great challenge. The invention of continuous culturing systems and in vivo genetic diversification technologies have changed the way how laboratory evolution is conducted, render optimisation of large, complex pathway possible. In vivo genetic diversification, phenotypic selection, and continuous cultivation are the key elements in in vivo continuous evolution, where any human intervention in the process is prohibited. This approach is crucial in highly efficient evolution strategy of metabolic pathway evolution.
Journal Article
Empirical evidence for metabolic drift in plant and algal lipid biosynthesis pathways
2024
Metabolic pathway drift has been formulated as a general principle to help in the interpretation of comparative analyses between biosynthesis pathways. Indeed, such analyses often indicate substantial differences, even in widespread pathways that are sometimes believed to be conserved. Here, our purpose is to check how much this interpretation fits to empirical data gathered in the field of plant and algal biosynthesis pathways. After examining several examples representative of the diversity of lipid biosynthesis pathways, we explain why it is important to compare closely related species to gain a better understanding of this phenomenon. Furthermore, this comparative approach brings us to the question of how much biotic interactions are responsible for shaping this metabolic plasticity. We end up introducing some model systems that may be promising for further exploration of this question.
Journal Article
Endosymbiosis in trypanosomatids: the genomic cooperation between bacterium and host in the synthesis of essential amino acids is heavily influenced by multiple horizontal gene transfers
by
da Silva, Flávia Maia
,
Vasconcelos, Ana Tereza R
,
Camargo, Erney P
in
Acid production
,
Agricultural sciences
,
Amino acids
2013
Background
Trypanosomatids of the genera
Angomonas
and
Strigomonas
live in a mutualistic association characterized by extensive metabolic cooperation with obligate endosymbiotic Betaproteobacteria. However, the role played by the symbiont has been more guessed by indirect means than evidenced. Symbiont-harboring trypanosomatids, in contrast to their counterparts lacking symbionts, exhibit lower nutritional requirements and are autotrophic for essential amino acids. To evidence the symbiont’s contributions to this autotrophy, entire genomes of symbionts and trypanosomatids with and without symbionts were sequenced here.
Results
Analyses of the essential amino acid pathways revealed that most biosynthetic routes are in the symbiont genome. By contrast, the host trypanosomatid genome contains fewer genes, about half of which originated from different bacterial groups, perhaps only one of which (ornithine cyclodeaminase, EC:4.3.1.12) derived from the symbiont. Nutritional, enzymatic, and genomic data were jointly analyzed to construct an integrated view of essential amino acid metabolism in symbiont-harboring trypanosomatids. This comprehensive analysis showed perfect concordance among all these data, and revealed that the symbiont contains genes for enzymes that complete essential biosynthetic routes for the host amino acid production, thus explaining the low requirement for these elements in symbiont-harboring trypanosomatids. Phylogenetic analyses show that the cooperation between symbionts and their hosts is complemented by multiple horizontal gene transfers, from bacterial lineages to trypanosomatids, that occurred several times in the course of their evolution. Transfers occur preferentially in parts of the pathways that are missing from other eukaryotes.
Conclusion
We have herein uncovered the genetic and evolutionary bases of essential amino acid biosynthesis in several trypanosomatids with and without endosymbionts, explaining and complementing decades of experimental results. We uncovered the remarkable plasticity in essential amino acid biosynthesis pathway evolution in these protozoans, demonstrating heavy influence of horizontal gene transfer events, from Bacteria to trypanosomatid nuclei, in the evolution of these pathways.
Journal Article
Characterizing the roles of changing population size and selection on the evolution of flux control in metabolic pathways
by
Chi, Peter B.
,
Orlenko, Alena
,
Liberles, David A.
in
Adaptation
,
Adaptation, Physiological
,
Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
2017
Background
Understanding the genotype-phenotype map is fundamental to our understanding of genomes. Genes do not function independently, but rather as part of networks or pathways. In the case of metabolic pathways, flux through the pathway is an important next layer of biological organization up from the individual gene or protein. Flux control in metabolic pathways, reflecting the importance of mutation to individual enzyme genes, may be evolutionarily variable due to the role of mutation-selection-drift balance. The evolutionary stability of rate limiting steps and the patterns of inter-molecular co-evolution were evaluated in a simulated pathway with a system out of equilibrium due to fluctuating selection, population size, or positive directional selection, to contrast with those under stabilizing selection.
Results
Depending upon the underlying population genetic regime, fluctuating population size was found to increase the evolutionary stability of rate limiting steps in some scenarios. This result was linked to patterns of local adaptation of the population. Further, during positive directional selection, as with more complex mutational scenarios, an increase in the observation of inter-molecular co-evolution was observed.
Conclusions
Differences in patterns of evolution when systems are in and out of equilibrium, including during positive directional selection may lead to predictable differences in observed patterns for divergent evolutionary scenarios. In particular, this result might be harnessed to detect differences between compensatory processes and directional processes at the pathway level based upon evolutionary observations in individual proteins. Detecting functional shifts in pathways reflects an important milestone in predicting when changes in genotypes result in changes in phenotypes.
Journal Article
Selection on metabolic pathway function in the presence of mutation-selection-drift balance leads to rate-limiting steps that are not evolutionarily stable
by
Chi, Peter B.
,
Orlenko, Alena
,
Liberles, David A.
in
Biological Evolution
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Enzymes - genetics
2016
Background
While commonly assumed in the biochemistry community that the control of metabolic pathways is thought to be critical to cellular function, it is unclear if metabolic pathways generally have evolutionarily stable rate limiting (flux controlling) steps.
Results
A set of evolutionary simulations using a kinetic model of a metabolic pathway was performed under different conditions to evaluate the evolutionary stability of rate limiting steps. Simulations used combinations of selection for steady state flux, selection against the cost of molecular biosynthesis, and selection against the accumulation of high concentrations of a deleterious intermediate. Two mutational regimes were used, one with mutations that on average were neutral to molecular phenotype and a second with a preponderance of activity-destroying mutations. The evolutionary stability of rate limiting steps was low in all simulations with non-neutral mutational processes. Clustering of parameter co-evolution showed divergent inter-molecular evolutionary patterns under different evolutionary regimes.
Conclusions
This study provides a null model for pathway evolution when compensatory processes dominate with potential applications to predicting pathway functional change. This result also suggests a possible mechanism in which studies in statistical genetics that aim to associate a genotype to a phenotype assuming independent action of variants may be mis-specified through a mis-characterization of the link between individual gene function and pathway function. A better understanding of the genotype-phenotype map has potential applications in differentiating between compensatory changes and directional selection on pathways as well as detecting SNPs and fixed differences that might have phenotypic effects.
Reviewers
This article was reviewed by Arne Elofsson, David Ardell, and Shamil Sunyaev.
Journal Article
Characterizing selective pressures on the pathway for de novo biosynthesis of pyrimidines in yeast
by
Gutenkunst, Ryan N.
,
Knecht, Wolfgang
,
Hermansen, Russell A.
in
Analysis
,
Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
,
Biologi
2015
Background
Selection on proteins is typically measured with the assumption that each protein acts independently. However, selection more likely acts at higher levels of biological organization, requiring an integrative view of protein function. Here, we built a kinetic model for
de novo
pyrimidine biosynthesis in the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
to relate pathway function to selective pressures on individual protein-encoding genes.
Results
Gene families across yeast were constructed for each member of the pathway and the ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous nucleotide substitution rates (dN/dS) was estimated for each enzyme from
S. cerevisiae
and closely related species. We found a positive relationship between the influence that each enzyme has on pathway function and its selective constraint.
Conclusions
We expect this trend to be locally present for enzymes that have pathway control, but over longer evolutionary timescales we expect that mutation-selection balance may change the enzymes that have pathway control.
Journal Article
High-throughput generation and comparison of genome-scale metabolic models reveal strain-specific metabolic diversity in 439 Lactococcus strains
by
Zeidan, Ahmad A.
,
Sonnenschein, Nikolaus
,
Sánchez, Benjamín J.
in
Amino acids
,
Annotations
,
Automation
2026
Comparative studies of genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) for a large set of different strains of the same bacterial species can play a crucial role in uncovering species-specific metabolism and understanding strain-specific metabolic variations. Additionally, results from these analyses can be used as an aid in industrial microbiology for selecting strains with the desired metabolic traits. In this study, we present a method for high-throughput generation and comparison of strain-specific GEMs and apply this method to 439 Lactococcus strains, which is a highly important species used worldwide for food fermentation. Comparison of the strain-specific GEMs revealed metabolic differences between strains relevant for industrial application and furthermore showed the potential of these models for understanding microbial interactions between strains of the same species in co-cultivation.
Journal Article