Climbing the vertebrate branch of U1A/U2B″ protein evolution

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Abstract

In the vertebrate lineage of the U1A/U2B″/SNF protein family, the U1A and U2B″ proteins bind to RNA stem-loops in the U1 or U2 snRNPs, respectively. However, their specialization is fairly recent, as they evolved from a single ancestral protein. The progress of their specialization (subfunctionalization) can be monitored by the amino acid sequence changes that give rise to their modern RNA-binding specificity. Using ancestral sequence reconstruction to predict the intermediates on the evolutionary branch, a probable path of sequential changes is defined for U1A and U2B″. The RNA-binding affinity for U1A/U2B″ protein ancestors was measured using modern U1 and U2 snRNA stem-loops and RNA stem-loop variants to understand how the proteins' RNA specificities evolved. © 2014 Delaney et al.

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Delaney, K. J., Williams, S. G., Lawler, M., & Hall, K. B. (2014). Climbing the vertebrate branch of U1A/U2B″ protein evolution. RNA, 20(7), 1035–1045. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.044255.114

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