Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol 15, 1055-1061, Copyright © 1998 by Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution
BG Hall and HS Malik
In addition to information for current functions, the sequence of a gene
includes potential information for the evolution of new functions. The
wild-type ebgA (evolved beta-galactosidase) gene of Escherichia coli
encodes a virtually inactive beta-galactosidase, but that gene has the
potential to evolve sufficient activity to replace the lacZ gene for growth
on the beta-galactoside sugars lactose and lactulose. Experimental
evidence, which has suggested that the evolutionary potential of Ebg enzyme
is limited o two specific amino acid replacements, is limited to examining
the consequences of single base- substitutions. Thirteen
beta-galactosidases homologous with the Ebg beta-galactosidase are widely
dispersed, being found in gram-negative and gram-positive eubacteria and in
a eukaryote. A comparison of Ebg beta-galactosidase with those 13
beta-galactosidases shows that Ebg is part of an ancient clade that
diverged from the paralogous lacZ beta- galactosidase over 2 billion years
ago. Ebg differs from other members of its clade at only 2 of the 15
active-site residues, and the two mutations required for full Ebg
beta-galactosidase activity bring Ebg into conformity with the other
members of its clade. We conclude that either these are the only acceptable
amino acids at those positions, or all of the single-base-substitution
replacements that must arise as intermediates on the way to other
acceptable amino acids are so deleterious that they constitute a deep
selective valley that has not been traversed in over 2 billion years. The
evolutionary potential of Ebg is thus limited to those two replacements.
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Determining the evolutionary potential of a gene
Biology Department, University of Rochester, New York 14627. drbh@uhura.cc.rochester.edu
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