
The pattern of amino acid residue replacement in the components of the bursicon signaling system (involving the BURSα/BURSβ heterodimer and its receptor BURSrec) was reconstructed across a phylogeny of 17 insect species, in order to test for the co-occurrence of replacements at sets of individual sites. Sets of three or more branches with perfectly concordant changes occurred to a greater extent than expected by chance, given the observed level of amino acid change. The latter sites (SPC sites) were found to have distinctive characteristics: (1) the mean number of changes was significantly lower at SPC sites than that at other sites with multiple changes; (2) SPC sites had a significantly greater tendency toward parallel amino acid changes than other sites with multiple changes, but no greater tendency toward convergent changes; and (3) parallel changes tended to involve relatively similar amino acids, as indicated by relatively low mean chemical distances. The results implicated functional constraint, permitting only a limited subset of amino acids in a given site, as a major factor in causing both parallel amino acid replacement and coordinated amino acid changes in different sites of the same protein and of interacting proteins in this system.
Insecta, Invertebrate Hormones, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled, Evolution, Molecular, Animals, Insect Proteins, Computer Simulation, Amino Acid Sequence, Phylogeny
Insecta, Invertebrate Hormones, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled, Evolution, Molecular, Animals, Insect Proteins, Computer Simulation, Amino Acid Sequence, Phylogeny
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