Multifunctional enzymes and evolution of biosynthetic pathways: Retro-evolution by jumps
โ Scribed by Siddhartha Roy
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 244 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-3585
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โฆ Synopsis
A likely scenario of evolution of biosynthetic pathways is believed to have occurred by retro-evolution through recruitment of existing enzymes rather than generation of de novo classes. It had been proposed that such retro-evolution occurred in steps as a response to depletion of an essential metabolite and availability of another related substance in the environment. In this article, I argue that because of instability of many such extant intermediates, it is unlikely that retro-evolution had occurred in steps. I further propose that such evolution in many cases has taken place by jumps, i.e., by recruitment of a multifunctional enzyme capable of catalyzing several steps at a time, albeit inefficiently. I further speculate that in some cases one primordial multienzyme may have catalyzed the whole sequence of reaction of a biosynthetic pathway, i.e., the pathway may have evolved by a single leap. Gene duplications and further evolution to more efficient enzymes led to extant pathways. Such a mechanism predicts that some or all enzymes of a pathway must have descended from a common ancestor. Sequence and structural homologies among extant enzymes of a biosynthetic pathway have been examined.
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Monitoring the time evolution of the concentration of a selected range of molecular weights of substrate, referred to as ''detectable'' substrate, has been used to determine endo-enzymic activities in polysaccharide depolymerizing processes. In the methodologies based on the use of dye-labeled subst