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Publication | Open Access

Emergence of fractal geometries in the evolution of a metabolic enzyme

52

Citations

66

References

2024

Year

Abstract

Fractals are patterns that are self-similar across multiple length-scales<sup>1</sup>. Macroscopic fractals are common in nature<sup>2-4</sup>; however, so far, molecular assembly into fractals is restricted to synthetic systems<sup>5-12</sup>. Here we report the discovery of a natural protein, citrate synthase from the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus, which self-assembles into Sierpiński triangles. Using cryo-electron microscopy, we reveal how the fractal assembles from a hexameric building block. Although different stimuli modulate the formation of fractal complexes and these complexes can regulate the enzymatic activity of citrate synthase in vitro, the fractal may not serve a physiological function in vivo. We use ancestral sequence reconstruction to retrace how the citrate synthase fractal evolved from non-fractal precursors, and the results suggest it may have emerged as a harmless evolutionary accident. Our findings expand the space of possible protein complexes and demonstrate that intricate and regulatable assemblies can evolve in a single substitution.

References

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