Physicochemical properties are potentially useful
in predicting functional differences between aligned protein
subfamilies. We present a method that considers physicochemical
properties from ancestral sequences predicted to have given
rise to the subfamilies of interest by gene duplication.
Comparison between two map kinases subfamilies, p38 and
ERK, revealed a region that had an excess of change in
properties after gene duplication followed by conservation
within the two subfamilies. This region corresponded to
that experimentally defined as important for substrate
and pathway specificity. The derived scores for the region
of interest were found to differ significantly in their
distribution compared to the rest of the protein when the
Kolmogorov–Smirnov test was applied (p
= 0.005). Thus, the incorporation of ancestral physicochemical
properties is useful in predicting functional differences
between protein subfamilies. In addition, the method was
applied to the MKK and MAPK components of the p38 and JNK
pathways. These proteins showed a similar pattern in their
evolution and regions predicted to confer functional differences
are discussed.