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How Bacterial Chemoreceptors Evolve Novel Ligand Specificities

José Antonio Gavira, Vadim M. Gumerov, Míriam Rico‐Jiménez, Marharyta Petukh, Amit A. Upadhyay, Álvaro Ortega, Miguel A. Matilla, Igor B. Zhulin, Tino Krell

2020mBio95 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many bacteria possess a large number of chemoreceptors that recognize a variety of different compounds. More than 60% of the genomes analyzed in this study contain paralogous chemoreceptors, suggesting that they emerge with high frequency. We provide first insight on how paralogous receptors have evolved and show that two chemoreceptors with a narrow ligand range have evolved from an ancestral protein with a broad chemoeffector spectrum. Protein structures show that multiple changes in the ligand-binding site account for the differences in the ligand spectrum. This work lays the ground for further studies aimed at establishing whether the principles of ligand-binding evolution reported here can be generalized for a wider spectrum of sensory proteins in bacteria.

Topics & Concepts

ChemoreceptorGene duplicationBiologyLigand (biochemistry)Amino acidGenomePhylogeneticsReceptorPseudomonas aeruginosaGeneticsGeneEvolutionary biologyBacteriaBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsProtein Structure and Dynamics