Artículos de revistas
Amino acid metabolism conflicts with protein diversity
Fecha
2014-08Registro en:
Krick, Teresa Elena Genoveva; Verstraete, Nina; Alonso, Leonardo Gabriel; Shub, David A.; Ferreiro, Diego; et al.; Amino acid metabolism conflicts with protein diversity; Oxford University Press; Molecular Biology and Evolution; 31; 11; 8-2014; 2905-2912
0737-4038
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Krick, Teresa Elena Genoveva
Verstraete, Nina
Alonso, Leonardo Gabriel
Shub, David A.
Ferreiro, Diego
Shub, Michael Ira
Sánchez Miguel, Ignacio Enrique
Resumen
The 20 protein-coding amino acids are found in proteomes with different relative abundances. The most abundant amino acid, leucine, is nearly an order of magnitude more prevalent than the least abundant amino acid, cysteine. Amino acid metabolic costs differ similarly, constraining their incorporation into proteins. On the other hand, a diverse set of protein sequences is necessary to build functional proteomes. Here, we present a simple model for a cost-diversity trade-off postulating that natural proteomes minimize amino acid metabolic flux while maximizing sequence entropy. The model explains the relative abundances of amino acids across a diverse set of proteomes. We found that the data are remarkably well explained when the cost function accounts for amino acid chemical decay. More than 100 organisms reach comparable solutions to the trade-off by different combinations of proteome cost and sequence diversity. Quantifying the interplay between proteome size and entropy shows that proteomes can get optimally large and diverse.