A billion years of evolution manifest in nanosecond protein dynamics

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Abstract

Protein dynamics form a critical bridge between protein structure and function, yet the impact of evolution on ultrafast processes inside proteins remains enigmatic. This study delves deep into nanosecond-scale protein dynamics of a structurally and functionally conserved protein across species separated by almost a billion years, investigating ten homologs in complex with their ligand. By inducing a photo-triggered destabilization of the ligand inside the binding pocket, we resolved distinct kinetic footprints for each homolog via transient infrared spectroscopy. Strikingly, we found a cascade of rearrangements within the protein complex which manifest in time points of increased dynamic activity conserved over hundreds of millions of years within a narrow window. Among these processes, one displays a subtle temporal shift correlating with evolutionary divergence, suggesting reduced selective pressure in the past. Our study not only uncovers the impact of evolution on molecular processes in a specific case, but has also the potential to initiate a field of scientific inquiry within molecular paleontology, where species are compared and classified based on the rapid pace of protein dynamic processes; a field which connects the shortest conceivable time scale in living matter (10-9 s) with the largest ones (1016 s).

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APA

Heckmeier, P. J., Ruf, J., Rochereau, C., & Hamm, P. (2024). A billion years of evolution manifest in nanosecond protein dynamics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 121(10). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2318743121

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