A long insertion reverts the functional effect of a substitution in acetylcholinesterase

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Abstract

Proteins are thought to undertake single substitutions, deletions and insertions to explore the fitness landscape. Nevertheless, the ways in which these different kind of mutations act together to alter a protein phenotype remain poorly described. We introduced incrementally the single substitution W290A and a 26 amino acid long insertion at the 297 location in the Nippostrongylus brasiliensis acetylcholinesterase B sequence and analysed in vitro the induced changes in the hydrolysis rate of three hemi-substrates: pirimicarb, paraoxon methyl and omethoate. The substitution decreased the hydrolysis rate of the three hemi-substrates. The insertion did not influence this kinetic alteration induced by the substitution for the former hemi-substrate, but reverted it for the two others. These results show that two different kinds of mutations can interact together to influence the direction of a protein's adaptative walk on the fitness landscape.

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Villatte, F., Schulze, H., Schmid, R. D., & Bachmann, T. T. (2003). A long insertion reverts the functional effect of a substitution in acetylcholinesterase. Protein Engineering, 16(7), 463–465. https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzg062

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