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Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev., 03 1997, 90-104, Vol 61, No. 1
PP Dennis and LC Shimmin
Halophilic (literally salt-loving) archaea are a highly evolved group of
organisms that are uniquely able to survive in and exploit hypersaline
environments. In this review, we examine the potential interplay between
fluctuations in environmental salinity and the primary sequence and
tertiary structure of halophilic proteins. The proteins of halophilic
archaea are highly adapted and magnificently engineered to function in an
intracellular milieu that is in ionic balance with an external environment
containing between 2 and 5 M inorganic salt. To understand the nature of
halophilic adaptation and to visualize this interplay, the sequences of
genes encoding the L11, L1, L10, and L12 proteins of the large ribosome
subunit and Mn/Fe superoxide dismutase proteins from three genera of
halophilic archaea have been aligned and analyzed for the presence of
synonymous and nonsynonymous nucleotide substitutions. Compared to
homologous eubacterial genes, these halophilic genes exhibit an
inordinately high proportion of nonsynonymous nucleotide substitutions that
result in amino acid replacement in the encoded proteins. More than
one-third of the replacements involve acidic amino acid residues. We
suggest that fluctuations in environmental salinity provide the driving
force for fixation of the excessive number of nonsynonymous substitutions.
Tinkering with the number, location, and arrangement of acidic and other
amino acid residues influences the fitness (i.e., hydrophobicity, surface
hydration, and structural stability) of the halophilic protein. Tinkering
is also evident at halophilic protein positions monomorphic or polymorphic
for serine; more than one-third of these positions use both the TCN and the
AGY serine codons, indicating that there have been multiple nonsynonymous
substitutions at these positions. Our model suggests that fluctuating
environmental salinity prevents optimization of fitness for many halophilic
proteins and helps to explain the unusual evolutionary divergence of their
encoding genes.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Evolutionary divergence and salinity-mediated selection in halophilic archaea
Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. patrick.p.dennis@unixg.ubc.ca
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