Reflections on antifreeze proteins and their evolution

Biochem Cell Biol. 2022 May 17. doi: 10.1139/bcb-2022-0029. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The discovery of radically different antifreeze proteins (AFPs) in fishes during the 1970s and 1980s suggested that these proteins had recently and independently evolved to protect teleosts from freezing in icy seawater. Early forays into the isolation and characterization of AFP genes in these fish showed they were massively amplified, often in long tandem repeats. The work of many labs in the 1980s onward led to the discovery and characterization of AFPs in other kingdoms, such as insects, plants, and many different microorganisms. The distinct ice-binding property that these ice-binding proteins (IBPs) share has facilitated their purification through adsorption to ice, and the ability to produce recombinant versions of IBPs has enabled their structural characterization and the mapping of their ice-binding sites (IBSs) using site-directed mutagenesis. One hypothesis for their ice affinity is that the IBS organizes surface waters into an ice-like pattern that freezes the protein onto ice. With access now to a rapidly expanding database of genomic sequences, it has been possible to trace the origins of some fish AFPs through the process of gene duplication and divergence, and to even show the horizontal transfer of an AFP gene from one species to another.

Keywords: duplication et divergence de gènes; famille multigénique; gene duplication and divergence; ice nucleation; ice-binding proteins; lateral gene transfer; multigene family; nucléation de la glace; protéines de liaison à la glace; transfert latéral de gènes.

Publication types

  • Review