Alignments of orthologous protein sequences convey a complex picture. Some positions are utterly conserved whilst others have diverged to variable degrees. Amongst the latter, many are non-exchangeable between extant sequences. How do functionally critical and highly conserved residues diverge? Why and how did these exchanges become incompatible within contemporary sequences? Our model is phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK), where lysine 219 is an essential active-site residue completely conserved throughout Eukaryota and Bacteria, and serine is found only in archaeal PGKs. Contemporary sequences tested exhibited complete loss of function upon exchanges at 219. However, a directed evolution experiment revealed that two mutations were sufficient f...
We develop an approximate maximum likelihood method to estimate flanking nucleotide context-dependen...
The factors that determine the relative rates of amino acid substitution during protein evolution ar...
The molecular clock hypothesis, stating that protein sequences diverge in evolution by accumulating ...
BACKGROUND: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids' physico...
Background: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids ’ physic...
International audienceThe nature of factors governing the tempo and mode of protein evolution is a f...
Determining the relative contributions of mutation and selection to evolutionary change is a matter ...
The complex constraints imposed by protein structure and function result in varied rates of sequence...
Posttranslational modifications (PTMs) regulate molecular structures and functions of proteins by co...
The nature of factors governing the tempo and mode of protein evolution is a fundamental issue in ev...
In aligning homologous protein sequences, it is generally assumed that amino acid substitutions subs...
Point mutations resulting in the substitution of a single amino acid can cause severe functional con...
An improved understanding of protein conformational changes has broad implications for elucidating t...
Point mutations resulting in the substitution of a single amino acid can cause severe functional con...
We have only a vague idea of precisely how protein sequences evolve in the context of protein struct...
We develop an approximate maximum likelihood method to estimate flanking nucleotide context-dependen...
The factors that determine the relative rates of amino acid substitution during protein evolution ar...
The molecular clock hypothesis, stating that protein sequences diverge in evolution by accumulating ...
BACKGROUND: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids' physico...
Background: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids ’ physic...
International audienceThe nature of factors governing the tempo and mode of protein evolution is a f...
Determining the relative contributions of mutation and selection to evolutionary change is a matter ...
The complex constraints imposed by protein structure and function result in varied rates of sequence...
Posttranslational modifications (PTMs) regulate molecular structures and functions of proteins by co...
The nature of factors governing the tempo and mode of protein evolution is a fundamental issue in ev...
In aligning homologous protein sequences, it is generally assumed that amino acid substitutions subs...
Point mutations resulting in the substitution of a single amino acid can cause severe functional con...
An improved understanding of protein conformational changes has broad implications for elucidating t...
Point mutations resulting in the substitution of a single amino acid can cause severe functional con...
We have only a vague idea of precisely how protein sequences evolve in the context of protein struct...
We develop an approximate maximum likelihood method to estimate flanking nucleotide context-dependen...
The factors that determine the relative rates of amino acid substitution during protein evolution ar...
The molecular clock hypothesis, stating that protein sequences diverge in evolution by accumulating ...