Christian Anfinsen Protein Folding
Christian Anfinsen Protein Folding
Christian Anfinsen Protein Folding
OF
EVOLUTION
The
MOLECULAR BASIS OF EVOLUTION
CHRISTIAN B. $+NFINSEN
Bethesda, Maryland
London l Chapman 6 Hall, Limited
TO MY MOTHER
AND
TO THE MEMORY OF
MY FATHER
T
1 he writing of this book has been stimulated
by the excitement and promise of contemporary protein chem-
istry and genetics and by the possibilities of integration of these
fields toward a greater understanding of the fundamental forces
underlying the evolutionary process. It has become, inevitably,
a highly personal volume expressing the experimental and phil-
osophical outlook which has resulted from a process of self-education
in an unfamiliar area of science. As with many biochemists, pure
biology, including genetics, has not been a major exposure in my
education, and the process of learning something about these subjects
has been both a revelation and a struggle. Various kind, and
frequently amused, friends, versed in the complexities of modem
genetics, have sifted through these pages, and I hope that most of
the misinterpretations and frank mistakes have been eliminated.
It has been highly interesting of late to observe how many scientists,
working either in protein chemistry or in genetics, or for that matter
in relatively unrelated fields, have arrived at long-range research plans
that are similar to. my own, down to almost the last detail of experi-
mental planning. This book, therefore, will undoubtedly represent the
point of view of numerous other biologically oriented individuals. On
the other hand, some of the ideas to be discussed are so new and
controversial that for every well-informed reader of this book who,
vii
the result of the dramatic strides taken in the last few years in genetic
in general, approves them there may be another who considers them theory and methodology, and a portion of the discussion in the fol-
nonsense. lowing pages will have to do with the experimental background of
The recent advances in the development of techniques for the study the analysis of genetic fine structure and with the possible significance
of protein structure have made it possible to elucidate the complete of such analysis to the question of protein biosynthesis.
amino acid sequences of a number of rather large polypeptides pos- It is abundantly clear that the metabolic organization of all living
sessing hormonal activity, and nearly complete sequences should soon cells, whether plant or animal, shows a remarkable uniformity. Even
be available for several with enzymatic activity as well, Concomitantly, a cursory examination of the literature of comparative biochemistry
there have been developed methods for the analysis of the finer, and physiology indicates that such biochemical functions as glycolysis,
more subtle, structural aspects of proteins, concerned with folding, proteolysis, and fatty acid degradation, as well as more integrated
intramolecular bonds of various types, and intermolecular interactions. processes such as electromotor activity and active transport through
These advances now begin to enable us to discern the vague outlines membranes, are ubiquitous in nature. Discounting the likelihood of
of macromolecules, in the three-dimensional sense, and to ascribe completely parallel evolution in the plant and animal kingdoms, and
their physical behavior and biological activity to specific covalent and in their major branches, we are led to conclude that, long before
noncovalent structural features. significant specialization, there existed in the waters of the earth vari-
We like to believe that Nature has been extremely wise and effi- ous primeval forms of life which were endowed with representatives
cient in the design of the chemical compounds, however large and of most of, if not all, the important biological processes characterizing
complicated, which make up the structure and machinery of living living things as we know them today. Although it is unlikely that we
things. Thus, although chemical differences are found among the shall ever have more than opinions regarding the origin of life, it
representatives of a given protein as isolated from a variety of species, does seem possible to approach, experimentally, the nature of the
we tend to suppose that such variations, rather than being fortuitous speciation which began when such primeval cells had become estab-
and unimportant irrelevancies, are part of a complicated and highly lished. This approach must involve a backward extrapolation of the
integrated set of variations in all the functionally and structurally information we can obtain on the chemical and genetic factors in
important elements of the cell, the summation of which accounts for organisms chosen from our modem environment.
the unique morphology and phenotypic character of the individual Before examining for the reader the aspects of the mechanism of
organism. evolution that have been particularly illuminated by recent advances
In the last few years, a number of studies have shown that various in biology and chemistry, it has been necessary to outline, in a broad
biologically active molecules may be subjected to considerable degra- sort of way, some of the basic fundamentals of evolution and the
dation without loss of functional competency. It becomes necessary, specific sciences, particularly genetics, that have contributed so essen-
therefore, to consider that the “macromoleculariness” of proteins and tially to its understanding. In the opening chapter, therefore, I have
other large molecules may, in many cases, be concemed not only with collected and rephrased some gleanings from the massive literature
a specific biological property but with other, more subtle, phenomena of morphological evolution to serve as a background for what follows.
of cellular activity and engineering not yet apparent, such as adsorp- In several subsequent chapters is presented further preparatory ma-
tion to surfaces or substrates. We must, perhaps, expect a multiplicity terial dealing with classical and contemporary genetics and with the
of variables in the “natural selection” of variants in molecules, all of basic facts of protein structure. Finally, after some discussion of the
which may, together, determine the biological suitability of a particu- rapidly expanding body of knowledge relating structure to function
lar molecular species. in biological systems, I have considered a few aspects of natural selec-
An understanding of the underlying principles governing the tion in evolution which suggest themselves as a result of contemporary
species specific variations in molecular structure and of the effect of research, as well as some experimental approaches at the molecular
such variations on species characteristics must involve a clarification level.
of the process of translating information present in the genetic ma- This book was written for pleasure, with the desire for self-en-
terial of the cell into the chemical language of enzymes, regulators, lightenment as the major stimulus. Since I cannot help but feel that
and the like. Such considerations are only now becoming possible as
PREFAC: IX
Viii PREFACE
everyone in science must be interested in the evolutionary process as
the central theme of biology, I have listed a number of the original
articles and books which contributed to the subject matter of this
book.
I am greatly indebted to many of my friends and colleagues, includ-
ing Dr. W. F. Harrington, Dr. Daniel Steinberg, Dr. W. Il. Carroll,
Dr. E. D. Kom, and Dr. W. D. Dreyer, who have read and helped
improve various chapters of this book. I should also like to express
my gratefulness to Dr. Bruce Ames for his patient help in connection
with some of the discussions of genetic subjects. My special thanks are
due Professor John T. Edsall of Harvard University and Dr. Michael
Sela of the Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovoth, Israel, who have
read the entire manuscript and whose suggestions have been invalu-
able in the avoidance of error and in the improvement of style and
organization. Finally, I should like to thank my wife, Florence Anfin- GROUND RULES
sen, for the cheerful and understanding support she gave to a fre-
quently rather morose husband. FOR
CHRISTIANB. ANFINSEN
Bethesda, Maryland THE READER
May 1959
CONTENTS