Gene Families, Epistasis and the Amino Acid Preferences of Protein Homologs

Evol Bioinform Online. 2019 Aug 15:15:1176934319870485. doi: 10.1177/1176934319870485. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

In order to preserve structure and function, proteins tend to preferentially conserve amino acids at particular sites along the sequence. Because mutations can affect structure and function, the question arises whether the preference of a protein site for a particular amino acid varies between protein homologs, and to what extent that variation depends on sequence divergence. Answering these questions can help in the development of models of sequence evolution, as well as provide insights on the dependence of the fitness effects of mutations on the genetic background of sequences, a phenomenon known as epistasis. Here, I comment on recent computational work providing a systematic analysis of the extent to which the amino acid preferences of proteins depend on the background mutations of protein homologs.

Keywords: Gene families; genetic background; mutational trajectories; protein biophysics; site-specific amino acid preferences.

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