Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.

Protein phosphorylation is a key mechanism to regulate protein functions. However, the contribution of this protein modification to species divergence is still largely unknown. Here, we studied the evolution of mammalian phosphoregulation by comparing the human and mouse phosphoproteomes. We found t...

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Main Authors: Luca Freschi, Mazid Osseni, Christian R Landry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24465218/?tool=EBI
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spelling doaj-2481df05c39e4db4a52a212d5ce5896b2021-04-21T13:48:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042014-01-01101e100406210.1371/journal.pgen.1004062Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.Luca FreschiMazid OsseniChristian R LandryProtein phosphorylation is a key mechanism to regulate protein functions. However, the contribution of this protein modification to species divergence is still largely unknown. Here, we studied the evolution of mammalian phosphoregulation by comparing the human and mouse phosphoproteomes. We found that 84% of the positions that are phosphorylated in one species or the other are conserved at the residue level. Twenty percent of these conserved sites are phosphorylated in both species. This proportion is 2.5 times more than expected by chance alone, suggesting that purifying selection is preserving phosphoregulation. However, we show that the majority of the sites that are conserved at the residue level are differentially phosphorylated between species. These sites likely result from false-negative identifications due to incomplete experimental coverage, false-positive identifications and non-functional sites. In addition, our results suggest that at least 5% of them are likely to be true differentially phosphorylated sites and may thus contribute to the divergence in phosphorylation networks between mouse and humans and this, despite residue conservation between orthologous proteins. We also showed that evolutionary turnover of phosphosites at adjacent positions (in a distance range of up to 40 amino acids) in human or mouse leads to an over estimation of the divergence in phosphoregulation between these two species. These sites tend to be phosphorylated by the same kinases, supporting the hypothesis that they are functionally redundant. Our results support the hypothesis that the evolutionary turnover of phosphorylation sites contributes to the divergence in phosphorylation profiles while preserving phosphoregulation. Overall, our study provides advanced analyses of mammalian phosphoproteomes and a framework for the study of their contribution to phenotypic evolution.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24465218/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luca Freschi
Mazid Osseni
Christian R Landry
spellingShingle Luca Freschi
Mazid Osseni
Christian R Landry
Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Luca Freschi
Mazid Osseni
Christian R Landry
author_sort Luca Freschi
title Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.
title_short Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.
title_full Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.
title_fullStr Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.
title_full_unstemmed Functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.
title_sort functional divergence and evolutionary turnover in mammalian phosphoproteomes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Protein phosphorylation is a key mechanism to regulate protein functions. However, the contribution of this protein modification to species divergence is still largely unknown. Here, we studied the evolution of mammalian phosphoregulation by comparing the human and mouse phosphoproteomes. We found that 84% of the positions that are phosphorylated in one species or the other are conserved at the residue level. Twenty percent of these conserved sites are phosphorylated in both species. This proportion is 2.5 times more than expected by chance alone, suggesting that purifying selection is preserving phosphoregulation. However, we show that the majority of the sites that are conserved at the residue level are differentially phosphorylated between species. These sites likely result from false-negative identifications due to incomplete experimental coverage, false-positive identifications and non-functional sites. In addition, our results suggest that at least 5% of them are likely to be true differentially phosphorylated sites and may thus contribute to the divergence in phosphorylation networks between mouse and humans and this, despite residue conservation between orthologous proteins. We also showed that evolutionary turnover of phosphosites at adjacent positions (in a distance range of up to 40 amino acids) in human or mouse leads to an over estimation of the divergence in phosphoregulation between these two species. These sites tend to be phosphorylated by the same kinases, supporting the hypothesis that they are functionally redundant. Our results support the hypothesis that the evolutionary turnover of phosphorylation sites contributes to the divergence in phosphorylation profiles while preserving phosphoregulation. Overall, our study provides advanced analyses of mammalian phosphoproteomes and a framework for the study of their contribution to phenotypic evolution.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/24465218/?tool=EBI
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