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A universal trend of amino acid gain and loss in protein evolution

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TLDR
Comparison of sets of orthologous proteins encoded by triplets of closely related genomes from 15 taxa representing all three domains of life and phylogenies to polarize amino acid substitutions shows expansion of initially under-represented amino acids apparently continues to this day.
Abstract
A comparison of corresponding sets of proteins encoded by closely related genes from organisms representing all three domains of life (Bacteria, Archaea and Eukaryota) suggests that the order in which the genetic code was assembled over 3.5 billion years ago continues to influence the evolution of proteins today. Across these diverse genomes, evolving proteins have accumulated Cys, Met, His, Ser and Phe, and lost many of their Pro, Ala, Glu and Gly residues. The same nine amino acids are currently accrued or lost in human proteins as shown by analysis of nucleotide polymorphisms. The amino acids with declining frequencies were probably among the first incorporated into the genetic code, and most of those with increasing frequencies were probably recruited late. Amino acid composition of proteins varies substantially between taxa and, thus, can evolve. For example, proteins from organisms with (G + C)-rich (or (A + T)-rich) genomes contain more (or fewer) amino acids encoded by (G + C)-rich codons1,2,3,4. However, no universal trends in ongoing changes of amino acid frequencies have been reported. We compared sets of orthologous proteins encoded by triplets of closely related genomes from 15 taxa representing all three domains of life (Bacteria, Archaea and Eukaryota), and used phylogenies to polarize amino acid substitutions. Cys, Met, His, Ser and Phe accrue in at least 14 taxa, whereas Pro, Ala, Glu and Gly are consistently lost. The same nine amino acids are currently accrued or lost in human proteins, as shown by analysis of non-synonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms. All amino acids with declining frequencies are thought to be among the first incorporated into the genetic code; conversely, all amino acids with increasing frequencies, except Ser, were probably recruited late5,6,7. Thus, expansion of initially under-represented amino acids, which began over 3,400 million years ago8,9, apparently continues to this day.

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Overview of the SAMPL6 host–guest binding affinity prediction challenge

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Post-translational control of protein function by disulfide bond cleavage.

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Distribution of the strength of selection against amino acid replacements in human proteins

TL;DR: This work has combined data on pathogenic missense mutations, on human non-synonymous SNPs and on human-chimpanzee divergence of orthologous proteins to ascertain the whole distribution of coefficients of selection against individual replacements for human proteins.
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Structural robustness of metabolic networks with respect to multiple knockouts.

TL;DR: A generalised framework for analysing structural robustness of metabolic networks, based on the concept of elementary flux modes (EFMs), is presented and it is proven that the robustness score decreases as the knockout depth increases.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clustal w: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice

TL;DR: The sensitivity of the commonly used progressive multiple sequence alignment method has been greatly improved and modifications are incorporated into a new program, CLUSTAL W, which is freely available.
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A Simple Sequentially Rejective Multiple Test Procedure

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple and widely accepted multiple test procedure of the sequentially rejective type is presented, i.e. hypotheses are rejected one at a time until no further rejections can be done.
Journal ArticleDOI

Floral dip: a simplified method for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Arabidopsis thaliana

TL;DR: The modified method should facilitate high-throughput transformation of Arabidopsis for efforts such as T-DNA gene tagging, positional cloning, or attempts at targeted gene replacement.
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A genomic perspective on protein families

TL;DR: Comparison of proteins encoded in seven complete genomes from five major phylogenetic lineages and elucidation of consistent patterns of sequence similarities allowed the delineation of 720 clusters of orthologous groups (COGs), which comprise a framework for functional and evolutionary genome analysis.
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Efficient transformation of rice (Oryza sativa L.) mediated by Agrobacterium and sequence analysis of the boundaries of the T-DNA.

TL;DR: A large number of morphologically normal, fertile, transgenic rice plants were obtained by co-cultivation of rice tissues with Agrobacterium tumefaciens, and sequence analysis revealed that the boundaries of the T-DNA in transgenic Rice plants were essentially identical to those intransgenic dicotyledons.
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