PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Moonlighting peptides with emerging function.

  • Jonathan G Rodríguez Plaza,
  • Amanda Villalón Rojas,
  • Sur Herrera,
  • Georgina Garza-Ramos,
  • Alfredo Torres Larios,
  • Carlos Amero,
  • Gabriela Zarraga Granados,
  • Manuel Gutiérrez Aguilar,
  • María Teresa Lara Ortiz,
  • Carlos Polanco Gonzalez,
  • Salvador Uribe Carvajal,
  • Roberto Coria,
  • Antonio Peña Díaz,
  • Dale E Bredesen,
  • Susana Castro-Obregon,
  • Gabriel del Rio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040125
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e40125

Abstract

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Hunter-killer peptides combine two activities in a single polypeptide that work in an independent fashion like many other multi-functional, multi-domain proteins. We hypothesize that emergent functions may result from the combination of two or more activities in a single protein domain and that could be a mechanism selected in nature to form moonlighting proteins. We designed moonlighting peptides using the two mechanisms proposed to be involved in the evolution of such molecules (i.e., to mutate non-functional residues and the use of natively unfolded peptides). We observed that our moonlighting peptides exhibited two activities that together rendered a new function that induces cell death in yeast. Thus, we propose that moonlighting in proteins promotes emergent properties providing a further level of complexity in living organisms so far unappreciated.