The contemporary proteinogenic repertoire contains 20 amino acids with diverse functional groups and side chain geometries. Primordial proteins, in contrast, were presumably constructed from a subset of these building blocks. Subsequent expansion of the proteinogenic alphabet would have enhanced their capabilities, fostering the metabolic prowess and organismal fitness of early living systems. While the addition of amino acids bearing innovative functional groups directly enhances the chemical repertoire of proteomes, the inclusion of chemically redundant monomers is difficult to rationalize. Here, we studied how a simplified chorismate mutase evolves upon expanding its amino acid alphabet from nine to potentially 20 letters. Continuous evo...
Directed evolution can generate a remarkable range of new enzyme properties. Alternate substrate spe...
BACKGROUND: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids' physico...
The stunning array of features and functions exhibited by proteins in nature should convince most sc...
The contemporary proteinogenic repertoire contains 20 amino acids with diverse functional groups and...
The rational design of enzymes is an important goal for both fundamental and practical reasons. Here...
Although chemists can synthesize virtually any small organic molecule, our ability to rationally man...
Enzyme design and evolution strategies rely exclusively on Nature’s standard amino acid alphabet of ...
Protein design is a challenging problem. We do not fully understand the rules of protein folding, an...
Life uses a common set of 20 coded amino acids (CAAs) to construct proteins. This set was likely can...
The genetic code is extremely old, predating the time of the most recent common ancestor of the thre...
Abstract Modern organisms commonly use the same set of 20 genetically coded amino acids for protein ...
Present state of research on expanding enzyme catalysis beyond nature For more than twenty years thi...
Enzymes have been evolving to catalyze new chemical reactions for billions of years, and will contin...
New genes can arise by duplication and divergence, but there is a fundamental gap in our understandi...
New genes can arise by duplication and divergence, but there is a fundamental gap in our understandi...
Directed evolution can generate a remarkable range of new enzyme properties. Alternate substrate spe...
BACKGROUND: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids' physico...
The stunning array of features and functions exhibited by proteins in nature should convince most sc...
The contemporary proteinogenic repertoire contains 20 amino acids with diverse functional groups and...
The rational design of enzymes is an important goal for both fundamental and practical reasons. Here...
Although chemists can synthesize virtually any small organic molecule, our ability to rationally man...
Enzyme design and evolution strategies rely exclusively on Nature’s standard amino acid alphabet of ...
Protein design is a challenging problem. We do not fully understand the rules of protein folding, an...
Life uses a common set of 20 coded amino acids (CAAs) to construct proteins. This set was likely can...
The genetic code is extremely old, predating the time of the most recent common ancestor of the thre...
Abstract Modern organisms commonly use the same set of 20 genetically coded amino acids for protein ...
Present state of research on expanding enzyme catalysis beyond nature For more than twenty years thi...
Enzymes have been evolving to catalyze new chemical reactions for billions of years, and will contin...
New genes can arise by duplication and divergence, but there is a fundamental gap in our understandi...
New genes can arise by duplication and divergence, but there is a fundamental gap in our understandi...
Directed evolution can generate a remarkable range of new enzyme properties. Alternate substrate spe...
BACKGROUND: Protein evolution is particularly shaped by the conservation of the amino acids' physico...
The stunning array of features and functions exhibited by proteins in nature should convince most sc...