The consistent observation across all kingdoms of life that highly abundant proteins evolve slowly demonstrates that cellular abundance is a key determinant of protein evolutionary rate. However, other empirical findings, such as the broad distribution of evolutionary rates, suggest that additional variables determine the rate of protein evolution. Here, we report that under the global selection against the cytotoxic effects of misfolded proteins, folding stability (ΔG), simultaneous with abundance, is a causal variable of evolutionary rate. Using both theoretical analysis and multiscale simulations, we demonstrate that the anticorrelation between the premutation ΔG and the arising mutational effect (ΔΔG), purely biophysical in origin, is a...
The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is considered the most powerful theory to understand the e...
The properties of biomolecules depend both on physics and on the evolutionary process that formed th...
The patterns of polymorphisms in genomes are imprints of the evolutionary forces at play in nature. ...
SummaryThe consistent observation across all kingdoms of life that highly abundant proteins evolve s...
SummaryThe consistent observation across all kingdoms of life that highly abundant proteins evolve s...
requirement for highly expressed proteins to evolve slowly. Lastly, we predict from multiscale evolu...
Proteins evolve at different rates. What drives the speed of protein sequence changes? Two main fact...
AbstractTo understand the variation of protein sequences in nature, we need to reckon with evolution...
Proteins evolve at different rates. What drives the speed of protein sequence changes? Two main fact...
A fundamental question for evolutionary biology is why different proteins evolve at dramatically dif...
The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is considered the most powerful theory to understand the e...
The properties of biomolecules depend both on physics and on the evolutionary process that formed th...
The patterns of polymorphisms in genomes are imprints of the evolutionary forces at play in nature. ...
Classical population genetics a priori assigns fitness to alleles without considering molecular or f...
The patterns of polymorphisms in genomes are imprints of the evolutionary forces at play in nature. ...
The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is considered the most powerful theory to understand the e...
The properties of biomolecules depend both on physics and on the evolutionary process that formed th...
The patterns of polymorphisms in genomes are imprints of the evolutionary forces at play in nature. ...
SummaryThe consistent observation across all kingdoms of life that highly abundant proteins evolve s...
SummaryThe consistent observation across all kingdoms of life that highly abundant proteins evolve s...
requirement for highly expressed proteins to evolve slowly. Lastly, we predict from multiscale evolu...
Proteins evolve at different rates. What drives the speed of protein sequence changes? Two main fact...
AbstractTo understand the variation of protein sequences in nature, we need to reckon with evolution...
Proteins evolve at different rates. What drives the speed of protein sequence changes? Two main fact...
A fundamental question for evolutionary biology is why different proteins evolve at dramatically dif...
The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is considered the most powerful theory to understand the e...
The properties of biomolecules depend both on physics and on the evolutionary process that formed th...
The patterns of polymorphisms in genomes are imprints of the evolutionary forces at play in nature. ...
Classical population genetics a priori assigns fitness to alleles without considering molecular or f...
The patterns of polymorphisms in genomes are imprints of the evolutionary forces at play in nature. ...
The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution is considered the most powerful theory to understand the e...
The properties of biomolecules depend both on physics and on the evolutionary process that formed th...
The patterns of polymorphisms in genomes are imprints of the evolutionary forces at play in nature. ...