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Structural genomics sheds light on protein functions and remote homologs across the insect tree of life

  • Weiyin Wu
  • , Chunlai Cui
  • , Yixiao Zhu
  • , Jingxuan Chen
  • , Qiancheng Zhuang
  • , Yazhou Wang
  • , Zicheng Liu
  • , Han Gao
  • , Guo Zheng Ou
  • , Chao Liu
  • , Mei Tao
  • , Yun Chen
  • , Ronghui Pan
  • , Guojie Zhang
  • , Hua Cai
  • , Jinghua Yang
  • , Xue Xin Chen
  • , Xiaofan Zhou*
  • , Sibao Wang*
  • , Xing Xing Shen*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Zhejiang University
  • CAS - Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences
  • ZJU-Hangzhou Global Scientific and Technological Innovation Center
  • Guangzhou Medical College
  • South China Agricultural University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Protein structure bridges the sequence–function relationship, enabling deep exploration of biological processes across diverse organisms. Insects, the most diverse animal lineage, accounting for over 50% of all described animal species, provide an exceptional system for exploring sequence–structure–function relationships. Here, we reconstructed a comprehensive and well-resolved phylogeny of 4854 insects, spanning all orders. Leveraging this framework, we created an atlas of 13.29 million predicted protein structures from 824 representative species, including 11.63 million newly predicted structures. Structural clustering revealed that proteins with divergent sequences but similar structures could be effectively grouped together. Structural similarity searches against proteins with well-characterized functions yielded annotations for 7.61 million insect proteins, including up to 14% of previously unannotated proteins. We further identified 750 million remote homologs between insect proteins, many of which trace back to ancient branches of the insect phylogeny. Remarkably, despite extensive sequence divergence, cGAS-like receptors (cGLRs) were structurally conserved across all 824 insects. Experimental assays demonstrated that these structurally identified cGLRs play a crucial role in antiviral defense in the yellow fever mosquito. Our findings highlight the significance of structural genomics for understanding protein function and evolution across the tree of life.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCell Research
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2026

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