“…Mutations in these evolutionary constrained active sites typically reduce catalytic activity (Carter & Wells, 1988; Loeb et al, 1989; Rennell et al, 1991), a proxy for fitness in enzymes, and are consequently often deleterious. Still, when such mutations do occur and persist, they allow observation of mutational trajectories that either recover the rate of catalysis (Gromer et al, 2003) or open new protein functions (Jayaraman et al, 2022; Jensen, 1976). These trajectories, however, are limited by the enzyme’s sequence, as epistasis favours mutations whose interactions with other residues compensate for catalytic loss or advance alternative properties, with pleiotropy further limiting trajectories that improve one enzymatic property but compromise another (Storz, 2016; Weinreich et al, 2006).…”