The Evolutionary Resilience of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins: Challenging the Neo-Darwinian Paradigm
The conventional framework of evolutionary biology, rooted in the Modern Synthesis, posits that the diversity of life is primarily the outcome of random genetic mutations acted upon by natural selection. Within this model, the accumulation of amino acid substitutions often measured by the Ka/Ks ratio serves as the molecular clock and the primary ledger of adaptive change. Ka/Ks ratios were used over 50,000 times over 50 years to quantify natural selection. However, the discovery and characterization of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins (IDPs) suggest that this framework is fundamentally incomplete. While structured globular proteins are often constrained by the rigid requirements of their 3D folding, IDPs, which lack a fixed three-dimensional structure under physiological conditions, exhibit an extraordinary evolutionary resilience. They persist across timescales spanning over a billion years, maintaining functional integrity despite significant primary sequence variation. T...