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Published May 2004 | public
Journal Article

Stability and the Evolvability of Function in a Model Protein

Abstract

Functional proteins must fold with some minimal stability to a structure that can perform a biochemical task. Here we use a simple model to investigate the relationship between the stability requirement and the capacity of a protein to evolve the function of binding to a ligand. Although our model contains no built-in tradeoff between stability and function, proteins evolved function more efficiently when the stability requirement was relaxed. Proteins with both high stability and high function evolved more efficiently when the stability requirement was gradually increased than when there was constant selection for high stability. These results show that in our model, the evolution of function is enhanced by allowing proteins to explore sequences corresponding to marginally stable structures, and that it is easier to improve stability while maintaining high function than to improve function while maintaining high stability. Our model also demonstrates that even in the absence of a fundamental biophysical tradeoff between stability and function, the speed with which function can evolve is limited by the stability requirement imposed on the protein.

Additional Information

© 2004 The Biophysical Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. Under an Elsevier user license. Received 7 November 2003, Accepted 12 January 2004, Available online 6 January 2009. We thank Hue Sun Chan, George Somero, Jeff Endelman, and Chris Voigt for their helpful comments on the manuscript. J.D.B. is supported by a Howard Hughes Medical Institute predoctoral fellowship. C.O.W. and C.A. were supported by the National Science Foundation under contract No. DEB-9981397. Part of this work was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023