Species-Specific Protein Sequence and Fold Optimizations
Michel Dumontier1, Katerina Michalickova2, Christopher W.V. Hogue
1micheld@mshri.on.ca, Department of Biochemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8, Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital, 600 University Ave.,Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1X5; 2katerina@mshri.on.ca, Department of Biochemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1A8, Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital, 600 University Ave.,Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1X5
An organism's ability to adapt to its particular environmental niche is of fundamental importance to its survival and proliferation. In the largest study of its kind, we sought to identify and exploit the amino-acid signatures that make species-specific protein adaptation possible across 100 complete genomes.
Environmental niche was determined to be a significant factor in variability from correspondence analysis using the amino acid composition of over 360,000 predicted open reading frames (ORFs) from 17 archae, 76 bacteria and 7 eukaryote complete genomes. Additionally, we found clusters of phylogenetically unrelated archae and bacteria that share similar environments by amino acid composition clustering. Composition analyses of conservative, domain-based homology modeling suggested an enrichment of small hydrophobic residues Ala, Gly, Val and charged residues Asp, Glu, His and Arg across all genomes. However, larger aromatic residues Phe, Trp and Tyr are reduced in folds, and these results were not affected by low complexity biases. We derived two simple log-odds scoring functions from ORFs (CG) and folds (CF) for each of the complete genomes. CF achieved an average cross-validation success rate of 85 ± 8% whereas the CG detected 73 ± 9% species-specific sequences when competing against all other non-redundant CG. Continuously updated results are available at http://genome.mshri.on.ca.
Our analysis of amino acid compositions from the complete genomes provides stronger evidence for species-specific and environmental residue preferences in genomic sequences as well as in folds. Scoring functions derived from this work will be useful in future protein engineering experiments and possibly in identifying horizontal transfer events.