mBio (Aug 2010)

Economical Evolution: Microbes Reduce the Synthetic Cost of Extracellular Proteins

  • Daniel R. Smith,
  • Matthew R. Chapman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00131-10
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 3

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Protein evolution is not simply a race toward improved function. Because organisms compete for limited resources, fitness is also affected by the relative economy of an organism’s proteome. Indeed, many abundant proteins contain relatively high percentages of amino acids that are metabolically less taxing for the cell to make, thus reducing cellular cost. However, not all abundant proteins are economical, and many economical proteins are not particularly abundant. Here we examined protein composition and found that the relative synthetic cost of amino acids constrains the composition of microbial extracellular proteins. In Escherichia coli, extracellular proteins contain, on average, fewer energetically expensive amino acids independent of their abundance, length, function, or structure. Economic pressures have strategically shaped the amino acid composition of multicomponent surface appendages, such as flagella, curli, and type I pili, and extracellular enzymes, including type III effector proteins and secreted serine proteases. Furthermore, in silico analysis of Pseudomonas syringae, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and over 25 other microbes spanning a wide range of GC content revealed a broad bias toward more economical amino acids in extracellular proteins. The synthesis of any protein, especially those rich in expensive aromatic amino acids, represents a significant investment. Because extracellular proteins are lost to the environment and not recycled like other cellular proteins, they present a greater burden on the cell, as their amino acids cannot be reutilized during translation. We hypothesize that evolution has optimized extracellular proteins to reduce their synthetic burden on the cell. IMPORTANCE Microbes secrete proteins to perform essential interactions with their environment, such as motility, pathogenesis, biofilm formation, and resource acquisition. However, because microbes generally lack protein import systems, secretion is often a one-way street. Consequently, secreted proteins are less likely to be recycled by the cell due to environmental loss. We demonstrate that evolution has in turn selected these extracellular proteins for increased economy at the level of their amino acid composition. Compared to their cellular counterparts, extracellular proteins have fewer synthetically expensive amino acids and more inexpensive amino acids. The resulting bias lessens the loss of cellular resources due to secretion. Furthermore, this economical bias was observed regardless of the abundance, length, structure, or function of extracellular proteins. Thus, it appears that economy may address the compositional bias seen in many extracellular proteins and deliver further insight into the forces driving their evolution.