An evolutionary model motivated by physicochemical properties of amino acids reveals variation among proteins

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Abstract

Motivation: The relative rates of amino acid interchanges over evolutionary time are likely to vary among proteins. Variation in those rates has the potential to reveal information about constraints on proteins. However, the most straightforward model that could be used to estimate relative rates of amino acid substitution is parameter-rich and it is therefore impractical to use for this purpose. Results: A six-parameter model of amino acid substitution that incorporates information about the physicochemical properties of amino acids was developed. It showed that amino acid side chain volume, polarity and aromaticity have major impacts on protein evolution. It also revealed variation among proteins in the relative importance of those properties. The same general approach can be used to improve the fit of empiricalmodels such as the commonly used PAM and LG models.

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Braun, E. L. (2018). An evolutionary model motivated by physicochemical properties of amino acids reveals variation among proteins. In Bioinformatics (Vol. 34, pp. i350–i356). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/bty261

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