What Is The Most Conserved Protein In Metazoa?
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12.6 years ago
Jon ▴ 20

I am working on a family of metazoan proteins (approximately 400 residues and virtually no indels in the multiple sequence alignments) were all members have 87%, 80%, and 77% identical residues within the vertebrates, chordates and bilateria, respectively. This is sequence identity at the amino acid level, but of course with a large number of synonymous mutations. This seems to be a protein family with a very high degree of conservation/stabilizing selection. Number of nonsyn mutations diveded by number of syn mutations = Ka/Ks is very low here.

In this article, from 2007, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17544402 it is claimed that "Hsp70 is, by far, the most conserved protein in evolution" (first sentence in section 2), but the references are from 1985-1994. An awful lot has happened in molecular biology since 1994...

Can anyone point me to a more recent study that asked the question: "What is the most conserved protein in biology?". That is, at the amino acid level, or basically the lowest overall Ka/Ks. I am mainly interested in metazoa.

protein sequence conservation • 3.8k views
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I can't point to any studies, but a good guess might be histones.

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Histones sounds like a good suggestion, but it I would expect that somone actually has done a proper study. On the other hand, I have not yet been able to find anything in the literature.

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12.6 years ago
Gareth Palidwor ★ 1.6k

I was author on a paper a while ago that has a rough clustering of all proteins (at the time) (PMID:18059312 Towards completion of the Earth's proteome.) If you were to look at the clusters and find the one that is rooted Metazoa and has the largest number of members that might be a good candidate. It would be somewhere in the upper left corner of this treemap. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2267224/figure/f2/

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