Issue 3, 2011

Evolution of domain promiscuity in eukaryotic genomes—a perspective from the inferred ancestral domain architectures

Abstract

Most eukaryotic proteins are composed of two or more domains. These assemble in a modular manner to create new proteins usually by the acquisition of one or more domains to an existing protein. Promiscuous domains which are found embedded in a variety of proteins and co-exist with many other domains are of particular interest and were shown to have roles in signaling pathways and mediating network communication. The evolution of domain promiscuity is still an open problem, mostly due to the lack of sequenced ancestral genomes. Here we use inferred domain architectures of ancestral genomes to trace the evolution of domain promiscuity in eukaryotic genomes. We find an increase in average promiscuity along many branches of the eukaryotic tree. Moreover, domain promiscuity can proceed at almost a steady rate over long evolutionary time or exhibit lineage-specific acceleration. We also observe that many signaling and regulatory domains gained domain promiscuity around the Bilateria divergence. In addition we show that those domains that played a role in the creation of two body axes and existed before the divergence of the bilaterians from fungi/metazoan achieve a boost in their promiscuities during the bilaterian evolution.

Graphical abstract: Evolution of domain promiscuity in eukaryotic genomes—a perspective from the inferred ancestral domain architectures

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
31 Aug 2010
Accepted
27 Oct 2010
First published
03 Dec 2010
This article is Open Access

Mol. BioSyst., 2011,7, 784-792

Evolution of domain promiscuity in eukaryotic genomes—a perspective from the inferred ancestral domain architectures

I. Cohen-Gihon, J. H. Fong, R. Sharan, R. Nussinov, T. M. Przytycka and A. R. Panchenko, Mol. BioSyst., 2011, 7, 784 DOI: 10.1039/C0MB00182A

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