We hypothesized that some amino acid substitutions in conserved proteins that are strongly fixed by critical functional roles would show lineage-specific distributions. As an example of an archetypal conserved eukaryotic protein we considered the active site of b-tubulin. Our analysis identified one amino acid substitution-b-tubulin F224-which was highly lineage specific. Investigation of b-tubulin for other phylogenetically restricted amino acids identified several with apparent specificity for well-defined phylogenetic groups. Intriguingly, none showed specificity for "supergroups'' other than the unikonts. To understand why, we analysed the b-tubulin Neighbor-Net and demonstrated a fundamental division between core b-tubulins (plant-like) and divergent b-tubulins (animal and fungal). F224 was almost completely restricted to the core b-tubulins, while divergent b-tubulins possessed Y224. Thus, our specific example offers insight into the restrictions associated with the co-evolution of b-tubulin during the radiation of eukaryotes, underlining a fundamental dichotomy between F-type, core b-tubulins and Y-type, divergent b-tubulins. More broadly our study provides proof of principle for the taxonomic utility of critical amino acids in the active sites of conserved proteins. © 2010 The Author(S).
CITATION STYLE
Tyler, K. M., Wagner, G. K., Wu, Q., & Huber, K. T. (2010). Functional significance may underlie the taxonomic utility of single amino acid substitutions in conserved proteins. Journal of Molecular Evolution, 70(4), 395–402. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00239-010-9338-y
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