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Protein complexes are under evolutionary selection to assemble via ordered pathways.

Abstract:
Is the order in which proteins assemble into complexes important for biological function? Here, we seek to address this by searching for evidence of evolutionary selection for ordered protein complex assembly. First, we experimentally characterize the assembly pathways of several heteromeric complexes and show that they can be simply predicted from their three-dimensional structures. Then, by mapping gene fusion events identified from fully sequenced genomes onto protein complex assembly pathways, we demonstrate evolutionary selection for conservation of assembly order. Furthermore, using structural and high-throughput interaction data, we show that fusion tends to optimize assembly by simplifying protein complex topologies. Finally, we observe protein structural constraints on the gene order of fusion that impact the potential for fusion to affect assembly. Together, these results reveal the intimate relationships among protein assembly, quaternary structure, and evolution and demonstrate on a genome-wide scale the biological importance of ordered assembly pathways.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.cell.2013.02.044

Authors



Journal:
Cell More from this journal
Volume:
153
Issue:
2
Pages:
461-470
Publication date:
2013-04-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1097-4172
ISSN:
0092-8674


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:395925
UUID:
uuid:46531740-4c07-452e-a60e-7ed6b7fd62b4
Local pid:
pubs:395925
Source identifiers:
395925
Deposit date:
2013-11-16

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