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Tracing the birth of structural domains from loops during protein evolution

M. Fayez Aziz, Fizza Mughal, Gustavo Caetano‐Anollés

2023Scientific Reports16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The structures and functions of proteins are embedded into the loop scaffolds of structural domains. Their origin and evolution remain mysterious. Here, we use a novel graph-theoretical approach to describe how modular and non-modular loop prototypes combine to form folded structures in protein domain evolution. Phylogenomic data-driven chronologies reoriented a bipartite network of loops and domains (and its projections) into 'waterfalls' depicting an evolving 'elementary functionome' (EF). Two primordial waves of functional innovation involving founder 'p-loop' and 'winged-helix' domains were accompanied by an ongoing emergence and reuse of structural and functional novelty. Metabolic pathways expanded before translation functionalities. A dual hourglass recruitment pattern transferred scale-free properties from loop to domain components of the EF network in generative cycles of hierarchical modularity. Modeling the evolutionary emergence of the oldest P-loop and winged-helix domains with AlphFold2 uncovered rapid convergence towards folded structure, suggesting that a folding vocabulary exists in loops for protein fold repurposing and design.

Topics & Concepts

TracingComputational biologyComputer scienceBioinformaticsBiologyEvolutionary biologyProgramming languageProtein Structure and DynamicsMicrobial Metabolic Engineering and BioproductionEnzyme Structure and Function