TY - JOUR
T1 - Ancestral Sequence Reconstruction of the Ribosomal Protein uS8 and Reduction of Amino Acid Usage to a Smaller Alphabet
AU - Zhao, Fangzheng
AU - Akanuma, Satoshi
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to Dr. Ryutaro Furukawa for assisting the phylogenetic analysis and ancestral sequence inference. This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Number 21H01200) and the Astrobiology Center Program of the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (Grant Number AB031007).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2023/2
Y1 - 2023/2
N2 - Understanding the origin and early evolution of proteins is important for unveiling how the RNA world developed into an RNA–protein world. Because the composition of organic molecules in the Earth’s primitive environment was plausibly not as diverse as today, the number of different amino acids used in early protein synthesis is likely to be substantially less than the current 20 proteinogenic residues. In this study, we have explored the thermal stability and RNA binding of ancestral variants of the ribosomal protein uS8 constructed from a reduced-alphabet of amino acids. First, we built a phylogenetic tree based on the amino acid sequences of uS8 from multiple extant organisms and used the tree to infer two plausible amino acid sequences corresponding to the last bacterial common ancestor of uS8. Both ancestral proteins were thermally stable and bound to an RNA fragment. By eliminating individual amino acid letters and monitoring thermal stability and RNA binding in the resulting proteins, we reduced the size of the amino acid set constituting one of the ancestral proteins, eventually finding that convergent sequences consisting of 15- or 14-amino acid alphabets still folded into stable structures that bound to the RNA fragment. Furthermore, a simplified variant reconstructed from a 13-amino-acid alphabet retained affinity for the RNA fragment, although it lost conformational stability. Collectively, RNA-binding activity may be achieved with a subset of the current 20 amino acids, raising the possibility of a simpler composition of RNA-binding proteins in the earliest stage of protein evolution.
AB - Understanding the origin and early evolution of proteins is important for unveiling how the RNA world developed into an RNA–protein world. Because the composition of organic molecules in the Earth’s primitive environment was plausibly not as diverse as today, the number of different amino acids used in early protein synthesis is likely to be substantially less than the current 20 proteinogenic residues. In this study, we have explored the thermal stability and RNA binding of ancestral variants of the ribosomal protein uS8 constructed from a reduced-alphabet of amino acids. First, we built a phylogenetic tree based on the amino acid sequences of uS8 from multiple extant organisms and used the tree to infer two plausible amino acid sequences corresponding to the last bacterial common ancestor of uS8. Both ancestral proteins were thermally stable and bound to an RNA fragment. By eliminating individual amino acid letters and monitoring thermal stability and RNA binding in the resulting proteins, we reduced the size of the amino acid set constituting one of the ancestral proteins, eventually finding that convergent sequences consisting of 15- or 14-amino acid alphabets still folded into stable structures that bound to the RNA fragment. Furthermore, a simplified variant reconstructed from a 13-amino-acid alphabet retained affinity for the RNA fragment, although it lost conformational stability. Collectively, RNA-binding activity may be achieved with a subset of the current 20 amino acids, raising the possibility of a simpler composition of RNA-binding proteins in the earliest stage of protein evolution.
KW - Ancestral protein
KW - Origin of protein
KW - Primitive ribosomal protein
KW - RNA–protein interaction
KW - Simplified amino acid repertoire
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85142146760&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85142146760&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00239-022-10078-w
DO - 10.1007/s00239-022-10078-w
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85142146760
SN - 0022-2844
VL - 91
SP - 10
EP - 23
JO - Journal of Molecular Evolution
JF - Journal of Molecular Evolution
IS - 1
ER -