定向分子进化
定向进化
中性突变
适应性进化
蛋白质进化
突变
适应(眼睛)
蛋白质工程
生物
积极选择
实验进化
选择(遗传算法)
中性分子进化理论
生物进化
遗传学
分子进化
计算生物学
突变体
基因
生物化学
计算机科学
酶
系统发育学
人工智能
神经科学
作者
Jesse D. Bloom,Frances H. Arnold
标识
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0901522106
摘要
Directed evolution is a widely-used engineering strategy for improving the stabilities or biochemical functions of proteins by repeated rounds of mutation and selection. These experiments offer empirical lessons about how proteins evolve in the face of clearly-defined laboratory selection pressures. Directed evolution has revealed that single amino acid mutations can enhance properties such as catalytic activity or stability and that adaptation can often occur through pathways consisting of sequential beneficial mutations. When there are no single mutations that improve a particular protein property experiments always find a wealth of mutations that are neutral with respect to the laboratory-defined measure of fitness. These neutral mutations can open new adaptive pathways by at least 2 different mechanisms. Functionally-neutral mutations can enhance a protein's stability, thereby increasing its tolerance for subsequent functionally beneficial but destabilizing mutations. They can also lead to changes in "promiscuous" functions that are not currently under selective pressure, but can subsequently become the starting points for the adaptive evolution of new functions. These lessons about the coupling between adaptive and neutral protein evolution in the laboratory offer insight into the evolution of proteins in nature.
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