Publication | Open Access
Network Context and Selection in the Evolution to Enzyme Specificity
292
Citations
58
References
2012
Year
Escherichia Coli MetabolismEngineeringGeneticsGeneralist EnzymesMetabolic NetworksMetabolic ModelMetabolic NetworkBioenergeticsBiological NetworkMetabolic Pathway AnalysisStructure-function Enzyme KineticsSystems BiologyBiochemistryDirected EvolutionSpecialist EnzymesBioinformaticsFunctional GenomicsNetwork ContextBiologyComputational BiologyProtein EvolutionEnzyme SpecificityMicrobiologyMetabolismMedicine
Enzymes evolved from promiscuous ancestors to highly specific catalytic activities, yet the persistence of generalist enzymes remains unexplained. Analysis of a genome‑scale E.
Enzymes are thought to have evolved highly specific catalytic activities from promiscuous ancestral proteins. By analyzing a genome-scale model of Escherichia coli metabolism, we found that 37% of its enzymes act on a variety of substrates and catalyze 65% of the known metabolic reactions. However, it is not apparent why these generalist enzymes remain. Here, we show that there are marked differences between generalist enzymes and specialist enzymes, known to catalyze a single chemical reaction on one particular substrate in vivo. Specialist enzymes (i) are frequently essential, (ii) maintain higher metabolic flux, and (iii) require more regulation of enzyme activity to control metabolic flux in dynamic environments than do generalist enzymes. Furthermore, these properties are conserved in Archaea and Eukarya. Thus, the metabolic network context and environmental conditions influence enzyme evolution toward high specificity.
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