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Recent advances suggest increased influence of selective pressure in allostery.

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Allosteric regulation of protein functions is ubiquitous in organismal biology, but the principles governing its evolution are not well understood. Here we discuss recent studies supporting the large-scale existence of… Click to show full abstract

Allosteric regulation of protein functions is ubiquitous in organismal biology, but the principles governing its evolution are not well understood. Here we discuss recent studies supporting the large-scale existence of latent allostery in ancestor proteins of superfamilies. As suggested, the evolution of allostery could be driven by the need for specificity in paralogs of slow evolving protein complexes with conserved active sites. The same slow evolution is displayed by purifying selection exhibited in allosteric proteins with somatic mutations involved in cancer, where disease-associated mutations are enriched in both orthosteric and allosteric sites. Consequently, disease-associated variants can be used to identify druggable allosteric sites that are specific for paralogs in protein superfamilies with otherwise similar functions.

Keywords: advances suggest; suggest increased; biology; recent advances; increased influence; allostery

Journal Title: Current opinion in structural biology
Year Published: 2020

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