Evolution of budding yeast prion-determinant sequences across diverse fungi |
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Authors: | Harrison Luke B Yu Zhan Stajich Jason E Dietrich Fred S Harrison Paul M |
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Institution: | Department of Biology, McGill University, Stewart Biology Building, 1205 Docteur Penfield Ave, Montreal, QC, Canada H3A 1B1. |
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Abstract: | Prions are transmissible self-replicating alternative states of proteins. Four prions (PSI+], URE3], RNQ+] and NU+]) can be inherited cytoplasmically in Saccharomyces cerevisiae laboratory strains. In the case of PSI+], there is increasing evidence that prion formation may engender mechanisms to uncover hidden genetic variation. Here, we have analysed the evolution of the prion-determinant (PD) domains across 21 fungi, focusing on compositional biases, repeats and substitution rates. We find evidence for constraint on all four PD domains, but each domain has its own evolutionary dynamics. For PSI+], the Q/N bias is maintained in fungal clades that diverged one billion years ago, with purifying selection observed within the Saccharomyces species. The degree of Q/N bias is correlated with the degree of local homology to prion-associated repeats, which occur rarely in other proteins (<1% of sequences for the proteomes studied). The evolutionary conservation of Q/N bias in Sup35p is unusual, with only eight other S. cerevisiae proteins showing similar, phylogenetically deep patterns of bias conservation. The URE3] PD domain is unique to Hemiascomycota; part of the PD domain shows purifying selection, whereas another part engenders bias changes between clades. Also, like for Sup35p, the RNQ+] and NU+] PD domains show purifying selection in Saccharomyces species. Additionally, in each proteome, we observe on average several hundred yeast-prion-like domains, with fewest in fission yeast. Our findings on yeast prion evolution provide further support for the functional significance of these molecules. |
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Keywords: | PD prion determinant LPS lowest probability sub-sequence YPL yeast-prion-like |
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