The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.

In nature, numerous mechanisms have evolved by which organisms fabricate biological structures with an impressive array of physical characteristics. Some examples of metazoan biological materials include the highly elastic byssal threads by which bivalves attach themselves to rocks, biomineralized s...

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Main Authors: Carmel McDougall, Ben J Woodcroft, Bernard M Degnan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4944945?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-0f363cf28a394d77b0678735a2c91e092020-11-25T02:47:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01117e015912810.1371/journal.pone.0159128The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.Carmel McDougallBen J WoodcroftBernard M DegnanIn nature, numerous mechanisms have evolved by which organisms fabricate biological structures with an impressive array of physical characteristics. Some examples of metazoan biological materials include the highly elastic byssal threads by which bivalves attach themselves to rocks, biomineralized structures that form the skeletons of various animals, and spider silks that are renowned for their exceptional strength and elasticity. The remarkable properties of silks, which are perhaps the best studied biological materials, are the result of the highly repetitive, modular, and biased amino acid composition of the proteins that compose them. Interestingly, similar levels of modularity/repetitiveness and similar bias in amino acid compositions have been reported in proteins that are components of structural materials in other organisms, however the exact nature and extent of this similarity, and its functional and evolutionary relevance, is unknown. Here, we investigate this similarity and use sequence features common to silks and other known structural proteins to develop a bioinformatics-based method to identify similar proteins from large-scale transcriptome and whole-genome datasets. We show that a large number of proteins identified using this method have roles in biological material formation throughout the animal kingdom. Despite the similarity in sequence characteristics, most of the silk-like structural proteins (SLSPs) identified in this study appear to have evolved independently and are restricted to a particular animal lineage. Although the exact function of many of these SLSPs is unknown, the apparent independent evolution of proteins with similar sequence characteristics in divergent lineages suggests that these features are important for the assembly of biological materials. The identification of these characteristics enable the generation of testable hypotheses regarding the mechanisms by which these proteins assemble and direct the construction of biological materials with diverse morphologies. The SilkSlider predictor software developed here is available at https://github.com/wwood/SilkSlider.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4944945?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carmel McDougall
Ben J Woodcroft
Bernard M Degnan
spellingShingle Carmel McDougall
Ben J Woodcroft
Bernard M Degnan
The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Carmel McDougall
Ben J Woodcroft
Bernard M Degnan
author_sort Carmel McDougall
title The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.
title_short The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.
title_full The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.
title_fullStr The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.
title_full_unstemmed The Widespread Prevalence and Functional Significance of Silk-Like Structural Proteins in Metazoan Biological Materials.
title_sort widespread prevalence and functional significance of silk-like structural proteins in metazoan biological materials.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description In nature, numerous mechanisms have evolved by which organisms fabricate biological structures with an impressive array of physical characteristics. Some examples of metazoan biological materials include the highly elastic byssal threads by which bivalves attach themselves to rocks, biomineralized structures that form the skeletons of various animals, and spider silks that are renowned for their exceptional strength and elasticity. The remarkable properties of silks, which are perhaps the best studied biological materials, are the result of the highly repetitive, modular, and biased amino acid composition of the proteins that compose them. Interestingly, similar levels of modularity/repetitiveness and similar bias in amino acid compositions have been reported in proteins that are components of structural materials in other organisms, however the exact nature and extent of this similarity, and its functional and evolutionary relevance, is unknown. Here, we investigate this similarity and use sequence features common to silks and other known structural proteins to develop a bioinformatics-based method to identify similar proteins from large-scale transcriptome and whole-genome datasets. We show that a large number of proteins identified using this method have roles in biological material formation throughout the animal kingdom. Despite the similarity in sequence characteristics, most of the silk-like structural proteins (SLSPs) identified in this study appear to have evolved independently and are restricted to a particular animal lineage. Although the exact function of many of these SLSPs is unknown, the apparent independent evolution of proteins with similar sequence characteristics in divergent lineages suggests that these features are important for the assembly of biological materials. The identification of these characteristics enable the generation of testable hypotheses regarding the mechanisms by which these proteins assemble and direct the construction of biological materials with diverse morphologies. The SilkSlider predictor software developed here is available at https://github.com/wwood/SilkSlider.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4944945?pdf=render
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