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1.
ATP-binding cassette (ABC) systems are found in all three domains of life and in some giant viruses and form one of the largest protein superfamilies. Most family members are transport proteins that couple the free energy of ATP hydrolysis to the translocation of solutes across a biological membrane. The energizing module is also used to drive non-transport processes associated, e.g., with DNA repair and protein translation. Many ABC proteins are of considerable medical importance. In humans, dysfunction of at least eighteen out of 49 ABC transporters is associated with disease, such as cystic fibrosis, Tangier disease, adrenoleukodystrophy or Stargardt’s macular degeneration. In prokaryotes, ABC proteins confer resistance to antibiotics, secrete virulence factors and envelope components, or mediate the uptake of a large variety of nutrients. Canonical ABC transporters share a common structural organization comprising two transmembrane domains (TMDs) that form the translocation pore and two nucleotide-binding domains (NBDs) that bind and hydrolyze ATP. In this Mini-Review, we summarize recent structural and biochemical data obtained from both prokaryotic and eukaryotic model systems. 相似文献
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Lise Boon Estefania Ugarte-Berzal Jennifer Vandooren 《Critical reviews in biochemistry and molecular biology》2020,55(2):111-165
AbstractProteases are a diverse group of hydrolytic enzymes, ranging from single-domain catalytic molecules to sophisticated multi-functional macromolecules. Human proteases are divided into five mechanistic classes: aspartate, cysteine, metallo, serine and threonine proteases, based on the catalytic mechanism of hydrolysis. As a protective mechanism against uncontrolled proteolysis, proteases are often produced and secreted as inactive precursors, called zymogens, containing inhibitory N-terminal propeptides. Protease propeptide structures vary considerably in length, ranging from dipeptides and propeptides of about 10 amino acids to complex multifunctional prodomains with hundreds of residues. Interestingly, sequence analysis of the different protease domains has demonstrated that propeptide sequences present higher heterogeneity compared with their catalytic domains. Therefore, we suggest that protease inhibition targeting propeptides might be more specific and have less off-target effects than classical inhibitors. The roles of propeptides, besides keeping protease latency, include correct folding of proteases, compartmentalization, liganding, and functional modulation. Changes in the propeptide sequence, thus, have a tremendous impact on the cognate enzymes. Small modifications of the propeptide sequences modulate the activity of the enzymes, which may be useful as a therapeutic strategy. This review provides an overview of known human proteases, with a focus on the role of their propeptides. We review propeptide functions, activation mechanisms, and possible therapeutic applications. 相似文献
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The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) includes 3 enzymes that conjugate ubiquitin to intracellular proteins that are then recognized and degraded in the proteasome. The process participates in the regulation of cell metabolism. In the kidney, the UPS regulates the turnover of transporters and signaling proteins and its activity is down regulated in acidosis-induced proximal tubular cell hypertrophy. In chronic kidney disease (CKD), muscle wasting occurs because complications of CKD including acidosis, insulin resistance, inflammation, and increased angiotensin II levels stimulate the UPS to degrade muscle proteins. This response also includes caspase-3 and calpains which act to cleave muscle proteins to provide substrates for the UPS. For example, caspase-3 degrades actomyosin, leaving a 14 kDa fragment of actin in muscle. The 14 kDa actin fragment is increased in muscle of patient with kidney disease, burn injury and surgery. In addition, acidosis, insulin resistance, inflammation and angiotensin II stimulate glucocorticoid production. Glucocorticoids are also required for the muscle wasting that occurs in CKD. Thus, the UPS is involved in regulating kidney function and participates in highly organized responses that degrade muscle protein in response to loss of kidney function. 相似文献
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Internal repetition within proteins has been a successful strategem on multiple separate occasions throughout evolution. Such protein repeats possess regular secondary structures and form multirepeat assemblies in three dimensions of diverse sizes and functions. In general, however, internal repetition affords a protein enhanced evolutionary prospects due to an enlargement of its available binding surface area. Constraints on sequence conservation appear to be relatively lax, due to binding functions ensuing from multiple, rather than, single repeats. Considerable sequence divergence as well as the short lengths of sequence repeats mean that repeat detection can be a particularly arduous task. We also consider the conundrum of how multiple repeats, which show strong structural and functional interdependencies, ever evolved from a single repeat ancestor. In this review, we illustrate each of these points by referring to six prolific repeat types (repeats in beta-propellers and beta-trefoils and tetratricopeptide, ankyrin, armadillo/HEAT, and leucine-rich repeats) and in other less-prolific but nonetheless interesting repeats. 相似文献
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Translation initiation: structures, mechanisms and evolution 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Translation, the process of mRNA-encoded protein synthesis, requires a complex apparatus, composed of the ribosome, tRNAs and additional protein factors, including aminoacyl tRNA synthetases. The ribosome provides the platform for proper assembly of mRNA, tRNAs and protein factors and carries the peptidyl-transferase activity. It consists of small and large subunits. The ribosomes are ribonucleoprotein particles with a ribosomal RNA core, to which multiple ribosomal proteins are bound. The sequence and structure of ribosomal RNAs, tRNAs, some of the ribosomal proteins and some of the additional protein factors are conserved in all kingdoms, underlying the common origin of the translation apparatus. Translation can be subdivided into several steps: initiation, elongation, termination and recycling. Of these, initiation is the most complex and the most divergent among the different kingdoms of life. A great amount of new structural, biochemical and genetic information on translation initiation has been accumulated in recent years, which led to the realization that initiation also shows a great degree of conservation throughout evolution. In this review, we summarize the available structural and functional data on translation initiation in the context of evolution, drawing parallels between eubacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes. We will start with an overview of the ribosome structure and of translation in general, placing emphasis on factors and processes with relevance to initiation. The major steps in initiation and the factors involved will be described, followed by discussion of the structure and function of the individual initiation factors throughout evolution. We will conclude with a summary of the available information on the kinetic and thermodynamic aspects of translation initiation. 相似文献
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Histone modifying enzymes catalyze the addition or removal of an array of covalent modifications in histone and non-histone proteins. Within the context of chromatin, these modifications regulate gene expression as well as other genomic functions and have been implicated in establishing and maintaining a heritable epigenetic code that contributes to defining cell identity and fate. Biochemical and structural characterization of histone modifying enzymes has yielded important insights into their respective catalytic mechanisms, substrate specificities, and regulation. In this review, we summarize recent advances in understanding these enzymes, highlighting studies of the histone acetyltransferases (HATs) p300 (also now known as KAT3B) and Rtt109 (KAT11) and the histone lysine demethylases (HDMs) LSD1 (KDM1) and JMJD2A (KDM4A), present overriding themes that derive from these studies, and pose remaining questions concerning their regulatory roles in mediating DNA transactions. 相似文献
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Halogenases: diverse structures mediating distinctive chemistries. 相似文献
11.
Elastomeric proteins are able to withstand significant deformations without rupture before returning to their original state when the stress is removed. Although elastomeric proteins differ considerably in their amino acid sequence, they all have a complex domain structure and share two common properties. Namely, they contain elastomeric domains, comprised of repeated sequences, and additional domains that form intermolecular crosslinks. Furthermore, several protein contain beta-turns as a structural motif within the elastomeric domains. 相似文献
12.
Brain insulin: regulation,mechanisms of action and functions 总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12
1. While many questions remain unanswered, it is now well documented that, contrary to earlier views, insulin is an important neuromodulator, contributing to neurobiological processes, in particular energy homeostasis and cognition. A specific role on cognitive functions related to feeding is proposed, and it is suggested that brain insulin from different sources might be involved in the above vital functions in health and disease.2. A molecule identical to pancreatic insulin, and specific insulin receptors, are found widely distributed in the central nervous system networks related to feeding, reproduction, or cognition.3. The actions of insulin in the central nervous system may be under both multilevel and multifactorial controls. The amount of blood insulin reaching the brain, brain insulin stores and secretion, potential local biosynthesis and degradation of the peptide, and insulin receptors and signal transduction can be affected by metabolic factors induced by nutrients, hormones, neurotransmitters, and regulatory peptides, peripherally or in the central nervous system.4. Glucose and serotonin regulate insulin directly in the hypothalamus and may be of importance for its biological effects. Central mechanisms regulating glucose-induced insulin secretion show some analogy with the mechanisms operating in the pancreas.5. A cross-talk between insulin and leptin receptors has been observed in the brain, and a regulation of central insulin actions, potentially via serotonin modulation, by leptin, galanin, melanocortins, and neuropeptide Y (NPY) is suggested.6. A more complete knowledge of the biological role of insulin in brain function and dysfunction, and of the regulatory mechanisms involved in these processes, constitutes a real advancement in the understanding of the pathophysiology of metabolic and mental diseases and could lead to important medical benefits. 相似文献
13.
Spiders and their mating systems are useful study subjects with which to investigate questions of widespread interest about sexual selection, pre- and post-copulatory mate choice, sperm competition, mating strategies, and sexual conflict. Conclusions drawn from such studies are broadly applicable to a range of taxa, but rely on accurate understanding of spider sexual interactions. Extensive behavioural experimentation demonstrates the presence of sex pheromones in many spider species, and recent major advances in the identification of spider sex pheromones merit review. Synthesised here are the emission, transmission, structures, and functions of spider sex pheromones, with emphasis on the crucial and dynamic role of sex pheromones in female and male mating strategies generally. Techniques for behavioural, chemical and electrophysiological study are summarised, and I aim to provide guidelines for incorporating sex pheromones into future studies of spider mating. In the spiders, pheromones are generally emitted by females and received by males, but this pattern is not universal. Female spiders emit cuticular and/or silk-based sex pheromones, which can be airborne or received via contact with chemoreceptors on male pedipalps. Airborne pheromones primarily attract males or elicit male searching behaviour. Contact pheromones stimulate male courtship behaviour and provide specific information about the emitter's identity. Male spiders are generally choosy and are often most attracted to adult virgin females and juvenile females prior to their final moult. This suggests the first male to mate with a female has significant advantages, perhaps due to sperm priority patterns, or mated female disinterest. Both sexes may attempt to control female pheromone emission, and thus dictate the frequency and timing of female mating, reflecting the potentially different costs of female signalling and/or polyandry to both sexes. Spider sex pheromones are likely to be lipids or lipid soluble, may be closely related to primary metabolites, and are not necessarily species specific, although they can still assist with species recognition. Newer electrophysiological techniques coupled with chemical analyses assist with the identification of sex pheromone compounds. This provides opportunities for more targeted behavioural experimentation, perhaps with synthetic pheromones, and for theorising about the biosynthesis and evolution of chemical signals generally. Given the intriguing biology of spiders, and the critical role of chemical signals for spiders and many other animal taxa, a deeper understanding of spider sex pheromones should prove productive. 相似文献
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Sauvanet C Arnauné-Pelloquin L David C Belenguer P Rojo M 《Médecine sciences : M/S》2010,26(10):823-829
Mitochondria are dynamic organelles that continuously move, fuse and divide. Their overall morphology, ranging from a filamentous network to a collection of isolated dots, is determined by fusion-fission equilibrium, which depends on the cellular and physiological context. The machineries of fusion and fission, that are conserved throughout evolution, include three large GTPases of the dynamin-superfamily: Dnm1/DRP1 - involved in fission?- as well as Fzo1/MFN and Mgm1/OPA1?- required for fusion. While the activities, mecanisms and regulations of mitochondrial fusion and fission machineries continue to be unravelled, the relevance of mitochondrial dynamics is witnessed by their impact on organelle functions, cell survival and cell differenciation, their requirement for embryonic development and their involvement in neurological diseases. 相似文献
15.
Stein T 《Molecular microbiology》2005,56(4):845-857
The endospore-forming rhizobacterium Bacillus subtilis- the model system for Gram-positive organisms, is able to produce more than two dozen antibiotics with an amazing variety of structures. The produced anti-microbial active compounds include predominantly peptides that are either ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified (lantibiotics and lantibiotic-like peptides) or non-ribosomally generated, as well as a couple of non-peptidic compounds such as polyketides, an aminosugar, and a phospholipid. Here I summarize the structures of all known B. subtilis antibiotics, their biochemistry and genetic analysis of their biosyntheses. An updated summary of well-studied antibiotic regulation pathways is given. Furthermore, current findings are resumed that show roles for distinct B. subtilis antibiotics beyond the "pure" anti-microbial action: Non-ribosomally produced lipopeptides are involved in biofilm and swarming development, lantibiotics function as pheromones in quorum-sensing, and a "killing factor" effectuates programmed cell death in sister cells. A discussion of how these antibiotics may contribute to the survival of B. subtilis in its natural environment is given. 相似文献
16.
Dupin I Etienne-Manneville S 《The international journal of biochemistry & cell biology》2011,43(12):1698-1707
The nucleus is the largest organelle in the cell and its position is dynamically controlled in space and time, although the functional significance of this dynamic regulation is not always clear. Nuclear movements are mediated by the cytoskeleton which transmits pushing or pulling forces onto the nuclear envelope. Recent studies have shed light on the mechanisms regulating nuclear positioning inside the cell. While microtubules have been known for a long time to be key players in nuclear positioning, the actin and cytoplasmic intermediate filament cytoskeletons have been implicated in this function more recently and various molecular links between the nuclear envelope and cytoplasmic elements have been identified. In this review, we summarize the recent advances in our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of nuclear localization in various animal cells and give an overview of the evidence suggesting a crucial role of nuclear positioning in cell polarity and physiology and the consequences of nuclear mispositioning in human pathologies. 相似文献
17.
Photoperiodic polyphenisms in rodents: neuroendocrine mechanisms, costs, and functions 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Annual changes in daylength figure prominently in the generation of seasonal rhythms in reproduction, and a wide variety of mammals use ambient photoperiod as a proximate cue to time critical reproductive events. Nevertheless, within many reproductively photoperiodic mammalian species, there exist individuals--termed "photoperiod nonresponders"--that fail to adopt a seasonal breeding strategy and instead exhibit reproductive competence at a time of year when their conspecifics are reproductively quiescent. Photoperiod nonresponsiveness has been principally characterized by laboratory observations--over half of the species known to be reproductively photoperiodic contain a proportion of nonresponsive individuals. The study of nonresponders has generated basic insights regarding photic regulation of reproduction in mammals. The neuroendocrine mechanisms by which the short-day photoperiodic signal is degraded or lost in nonresponders varies between species: differences in features of the circadian pacemaker, which provides photoperiodic input to the reproductive neuroendocrine system, have been identified in hamsters; changes in the responsiveness of hypothalamic gonadotrophs to melatonin and as-yet-unspecified inhibitory signals have been implicated in voles and mice. Individuals that continue to breed when their conspecifics refrain might enjoy higher fitness under certain circumstances. Statements regarding the adaptive function of reproductive nonresponsiveness to photoperiod require additional information on the costs (metabolic and fitness) of sustaining reproductive function during the winter months and how these costs vary as a function of environmental conditions. Reproductive nonresponders thus continue to represent a challenge to theories that extol the adaptive function of seasonality. Several nonexclusive hypotheses are proposed to account for the maintenance of nonresponsive individuals in wild rodent populations. 相似文献
18.
Carsten Janke 《The Journal of cell biology》2014,206(4):461-472
Microtubules are cytoskeletal filaments that are dynamically assembled from α/β-tubulin heterodimers. The primary sequence and structure of the tubulin proteins and, consequently, the properties and architecture of microtubules are highly conserved in eukaryotes. Despite this conservation, tubulin is subject to heterogeneity that is generated in two ways: by the expression of different tubulin isotypes and by posttranslational modifications (PTMs). Identifying the mechanisms that generate and control tubulin heterogeneity and how this heterogeneity affects microtubule function are long-standing goals in the field. Recent work on tubulin PTMs has shed light on how these modifications could contribute to a “tubulin code” that coordinates the complex functions of microtubules in cells.
Introduction
Microtubules are key elements of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton that dynamically assemble from heterodimers of α- and β-tubulin. The structure of microtubules, as well as the protein sequences of α- and β-tubulin, is highly conserved in evolution, and consequently, microtubules look alike in almost all species. Despite the high level of conservation, microtubules adapt to a large variety of cellular functions. This adaptation can be mediated by a large panel of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), including molecular motors, as well as by mechanisms that directly modify the microtubules, thus either changing their biophysical properties or attracting subsets of MAPs that convey specific functions to the modified microtubules. Two different mechanism can generate microtubule diversity: the expression of different α- and β-tubulin genes, referred to as tubulin isotypes, and the generation of posttranslational modifications (PTMs) on α- and β-tubulin (Figs. 1 and and2).2). Although known for several decades, deciphering how tubulin heterogeneity controls microtubule functions is still largely unchartered. This review summarizes the current advances in the field and discusses new concepts arising.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Tubulin heterogeneity generated by PTMs. (A) Schematic representation of the distribution of different PTMs of tubulin on the α/β-tubulin dimer with respect to their position in the microtubule lattice. Acetylation (Ac), phosphorylation (P), and polyamination (Am) are found within the tubulin bodies that assemble into the microtubule lattice, whereas polyglutamylation, polyglycylation, detyrosination, and C-terminal deglutamylation take place within the C-terminal tubulin tails that project away from the lattice surface. The tubulin dimer represents TubA1A and TubB2B (Fig. 2), and modification sites for polyglutamylation and polyglycylation have been randomly chosen. (B) Chemical structure of the branched peptide formed by polyglutamylation and polyglycylation, using the γ-carboxyl groups of the modified glutamate residues as acceptor sites for the isopeptide bonds. Note that in the case of polyglutamylation, the elongation of the side chains generates classical peptide bonds (Redeker et al., 1991).Open in a separate windowFigure 2.Heterogeneity of C-terminal tails of tubulin isotypes and their PTMs. The amino acid sequences of all tubulin genes found in the human genome are indicated, starting at the last amino acid of the folded tubulin bodies. Amino acids are represented in single-letter codes and color coded according to their biochemical properties. Known sites for polyglutamylation are indicated (Eddé et al., 1990; Alexander et al., 1991; Rüdiger et al., 1992). Potential modification sites (all glutamate residues) are indicated. Known C-terminal truncation reactions of α/β-tubulin (tub) are indicated. The C-terminal tails of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are shown to illustrate the phylogenetic diversity of these domains.Tubulin isotypes
The cloning of the first tubulin genes in the late 1970’s (Cleveland et al., 1978) revealed the existence of multiple genes coding for α- or β-tubulin (Ludueña and Banerjee, 2008) that generate subtle differences in their amino acid sequences, particularly in the C-terminal tails (Fig. 2). It was assumed that tubulin isotypes, as they were named, assemble into discrete microtubule species that carry out unique functions. This conclusion was reinforced by the observation that some isotypes are specifically expressed in specialized cells and tissues and that isotype expression changes during development (Lewis et al., 1985; Denoulet et al., 1986). These high expectations were mitigated by a subsequent study showing that all tubulin isotypes freely copolymerize into heterogeneous microtubules (Lewis et al., 1987). To date, only highly specialized microtubules, such as ciliary axonemes (Renthal et al., 1993; Raff et al., 2008), neuronal microtubules (Denoulet et al., 1986; Joshi and Cleveland, 1989), and microtubules of the marginal band of platelets (Wang et al., 1986; Schwer et al., 2001) are known to depend on some specific (β) tubulin isotypes, whereas the function of most other microtubules appears to be independent of their isotype composition.More recently, a large number of mutations in single tubulin isotypes have been linked to deleterious neurodevelopmental disorders (Keays et al., 2007; Fallet-Bianco et al., 2008; Tischfield et al., 2010; Cederquist et al., 2012; Niwa et al., 2013). Mutations of a single tubulin isotype could lead to an imbalance in the levels of tubulins as a result of a lack of incorporation of mutant isoforms into the microtubule lattice or to incorporation that perturbs the architecture or dynamics of the microtubules. The analysis of tubulin disease mutations is starting to reveal how subtle alterations of the microtubule cytoskeleton can lead to functional aberrations in cells and organisms and might provide novel insights into the roles of tubulin isotypes that have so far been considered redundant.Tubulin PTMs
Tubulin is subject to a large range of PTMs (Fig. 1), from well-known ones, such as acetylation or phosphorylation, to others that have so far mostly been found on tubulin. Detyrosination/tyrosination, polyglutamylation, and polyglycylation, for instance, might have evolved to specifically regulate tubulin and microtubule functions, in particular in cilia and flagella, as their evolution is closely linked to these organelles. The strong link between those modifications and tubulin evolution has led to the perception that they are tubulin PTMs; however, apart from detyrosination/tyrosination, most of them have other substrates (Regnard et al., 2000; Xie et al., 2007; van Dijk et al., 2008; Rogowski et al., 2009).Tubulin acetylation.
Tubulin acetylation was discovered on lysine 40 (K40; Fig. 1 A) of flagellar α-tubulin in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (L’Hernault and Rosenbaum, 1985) and is generally enriched on stable microtubules in cells. Considering that K40 acetylation per se has no effect on the ultrastructure of microtubules (Howes et al., 2014), it is rather unlikely that it directly stabilizes microtubules. As a result of its localization at the inner face of microtubules (Soppina et al., 2012), K40 acetylation might rather affect the binding of microtubule inner proteins, a poorly characterized family of proteins (Nicastro et al., 2011; Linck et al., 2014). Functional experiments in cells have further suggested that K40 acetylation regulates intracellular transport by regulating the traffic of kinesin motors (Reed et al., 2006; Dompierre et al., 2007). These observations could so far not be confirmed by biophysical measurements in vitro (Walter et al., 2012; Kaul et al., 2014), suggesting that in cells, K40 acetylation might affect intracellular traffic by indirect mechanisms.Enzymes involved in K40 acetylation are HDAC6 (histone deacetylase family member 6; Hubbert et al., 2002) and Sirt2 (sirtuin type 2; North et al., 2003). Initial functional studies used overexpression, depletion, or chemical inhibition of these enzymes. These studies should be discussed with care, as both HDAC6 and Sirt2 deacetylate other substrates and have deacetylase-independent functions and chemical inhibition of HDAC6 is not entirely selective for this enzyme (Valenzuela-Fernández et al., 2008). In contrast, acetyl transferase α-Tat1 (or Mec-17; Akella et al., 2010; Shida et al., 2010) specifically acetylates α-tubulin K40 (Fig. 3), thus providing a more specific tool to investigate the functions of K40 acetylation. Knockout mice of α-Tat1 are completely void of K40-acetylated tubulin; however, they show only slight phenotypic aberrations, for instance, in their sperm flagellum (Kalebic et al., 2013). A more detailed analysis of α-Tat1 knockout mice demonstrated that absence of K40 acetylation leads to reduced contact inhibition in proliferating cells (Aguilar et al., 2014). In migrating cells, α-Tat1 is targeted to microtubules at the leading edge by clathrin-coated pits, resulting in locally restricted acetylation of those microtubules (Montagnac et al., 2013). A recent structural study of α-Tat1 demonstrated that the low catalytic rate of this enzyme, together with its localization inside the microtubules, caused acetylation to accumulate selectively in stable, long-lived microtubules (Szyk et al., 2014), thus explaining the link between this PTM and stable microtubules in cells. However, the direct cellular function of K40 acetylation on microtubules is still unclear.Open in a separate windowFigure 3.Enzymes involved in PTM of tubulin. Schematic representation of known enzymes (mammalian enzymes are shown) involved in the generation and removal of PTMs shown in Fig. 1. Note that some enzymes still remain unknown, and some modifications are irreversible. (*CCP5 preferentially removes branching points [Rogowski et al., 2010]; however, the enzyme can also hydrolyze linear glutamate chains [Berezniuk et al., 2013]).Recent discoveries have brought up the possibility that tubulin could be subject to multiple acetylation events. A whole-acetylome study identified >10 novel sites on α- and β-tubulin (Choudhary et al., 2009); however, none of these sites have been confirmed. Another acetylation event has been described at lysine 252 (K252) of β-tubulin. This modification is catalyzed by the acetyltransferase San (Fig. 3) and might regulate the assembly efficiency of microtubules as a result of its localization at the polymerization interface (Chu et al., 2011).Tubulin detyrosination.
Most α-tubulin genes in different species encode a C-terminal tyrosine residue (Fig. 2; Valenzuela et al., 1981). This tyrosine can be enzymatically removed (Hallak et al., 1977) and religated (Fig. 3; Arce et al., 1975). Mapping of tyrosinated and detyrosinated microtubules in cells using specific antibodies (Gundersen et al., 1984; Geuens et al., 1986; Cambray-Deakin and Burgoyne, 1987a) revealed that subsets of interphase and mitotic spindle microtubules are detyrosinated (Gundersen and Bulinski, 1986). As detyrosination was mostly found on stable and long-lived microtubules, especially in neurons (Cambray-Deakin and Burgoyne, 1987b; Robson and Burgoyne, 1989; Brown et al., 1993), it was assumed that this modification promotes microtubule stability (Gundersen et al., 1987; Sherwin et al., 1987). Although a direct stabilization of the microtubule lattice was considered unlikely (Khawaja et al., 1988), it was found more recently that detyrosination protects cellular microtubules from the depolymerizing activity of kinesin-13–type motor proteins, such as KIF2 or MCAK, thus increasing their longevity (Peris et al., 2009; Sirajuddin et al., 2014).Besides kinesin-13 motors, plus end–tracking proteins with cytoskeleton-associated protein glycine-rich (CAP-Gly) domains, such as CLIP170 or p150/glued, specifically interact with tyrosinated microtubules (Peris et al., 2006; Bieling et al., 2008) via this domain (Honnappa et al., 2006). In contrast, kinesin-1 moves preferentially on detyrosinated microtubules tracks in cells (Liao and Gundersen, 1998; Kreitzer et al., 1999; Konishi and Setou, 2009). The effect of detyrosination on kinesin-1 motor behavior was recently measured in vitro, and a small but significant increase in the landing rate and processivity of the motor has been found (Kaul et al., 2014). Such subtle changes in the motor behavior could, in conjunction with other factors, such as regulatory MAPs associated with cargo transport complexes (Barlan et al., 2013), lead to a preferential use of detyrosinated microtubules by kinesin-1 in cells.Despite the early biochemical characterization of a detyrosinating activity, the carboxypeptidase catalyzing detyrosination of α-tubulin has yet to be identified (Hallak et al., 1977; Argaraña et al., 1978, 1980). In contrast, the reverse enzyme, tubulin tyrosine ligase (TTL; Fig. 3; Raybin and Flavin, 1975; Deanin and Gordon, 1976; Argaraña et al., 1980), has been purified (Schröder et al., 1985) and cloned (Ersfeld et al., 1993). TTL modifies nonpolymerized tubulin dimers exclusively. This selectivity is determined by the binding interface between the TTL and tubulin dimers (Szyk et al., 2011, 2013; Prota et al., 2013). In contrast, the so far unidentified detyrosinase acts preferentially on polymerized microtubules (Kumar and Flavin, 1981; Arce and Barra, 1983), thus modifying a select population of microtubules within cells (Gundersen et al., 1987).In most organisms, only one unique gene for TTL exists. Consequently, TTL knockout mice show a huge accumulation of detyrosinated and particularly Δ2-tubulin (see next section). TTL knockout mice die before birth (Erck et al., 2005) with major developmental defects in the nervous system that might be related to aberrant neuronal differentiation (Marcos et al., 2009). TTL is strictly tubulin specific (Prota et al., 2013), indicating that all observed defects in TTL knockout mice are directly related to the deregulation of the microtubule cytoskeleton.Δ2-tubulin and further C-terminal modification.
A biochemical study of brain tubulin revealed that ∼35% of α-tubulin cannot be retyrosinated (Paturle et al., 1989) because of the lack of the penultimate C-terminal glutamate residue of the primary protein sequence (Fig. 2; Paturle-Lafanechère et al., 1991). This so-called Δ2-tubulin (for two C-terminal amino acids missing) cannot undergo retyrosination as a result of structural constraints within TTL (Prota et al., 2013) and thus is considered an irreversible PTM.Δ2-tubulin accumulates in long-lived microtubules of differentiated neurons, axonemes of cilia and flagella, and also in cellular microtubules that have been artificially stabilized, for instance, with taxol (Paturle-Lafanechère et al., 1994). The generation of Δ2-tubulin requires previous detyrosination of α-tubulin; thus, the levels of this PTM are indirectly regulated by the detyrosination/retyrosination cycle. This mechanistic link is particularly apparent in the TTL knockout mice, which show massive accumulation of Δ2-tubulin in all tested tissues (Erck et al., 2005). Loss of TTL and the subsequent increase of Δ2-tubulin levels were also linked to tumor growth and might contribute to the aggressiveness of the tumors by an as-yet-unknown mechanism (Lafanechère et al., 1998; Mialhe et al., 2001). To date, no specific biochemical role of Δ2-tubulin has been determined; thus, one possibility is that the modification simply locks tubulin in the detyrosinated state.The enzymes responsible for Δ2-tubulin generation are members of a family of cytosolic carboxypeptidases (CCPs; Fig. 3; Kalinina et al., 2007; Rodriguez de la Vega et al., 2007), and most of them also remove polyglutamylation from tubulin (see next section; Rogowski et al., 2010). These enzymes are also able to generate Δ3-tubulin (Fig. 1 A; Berezniuk et al., 2012), indicating that further degradation of the tubulin C-terminal tails are possible; however, the functional significance of this event is unknown.Polyglutamylation.
Polyglutamylation is a PTM that occurs when secondary glutamate side chains are formed on γ-carboxyl groups of glutamate residues in a protein (Fig. 1, A and B). The modification was first discovered on α- and β-tubulin from the brain (Eddé et al., 1990; Alexander et al., 1991; Rüdiger et al., 1992; Mary et al., 1994) as well as on axonemal tubulin from different species (Mary et al., 1996, 1997); however, it is not restricted to tubulin (Regnard et al., 2000; van Dijk et al., 2008). Using a glutamylation-specific antibody, GT335 (Wolff et al., 1992), it was observed that tubulin glutamylation increases during neuronal differentiation (Audebert et al., 1993, 1994) and that axonemes of cilia and flagella (Fouquet et al., 1994), as well as centrioles of mammalian centrosomes (Bobinnec et al., 1998), are extensively glutamylated.Enzymes catalyzing polyglutamylation belong to the TTL-like (TTLL) family (Regnard et al., 2003; Janke et al., 2005). In mammals, nine glutamylases exist, each of them showing intrinsic preferences for modifying either α- or β-tubulin as well as for initiating or elongating glutamate chains (Fig. 3; van Dijk et al., 2007). Two of the six well-characterized TTLL glutamylases also modify nontubulin substrates (van Dijk et al., 2008).Knockout or depletion of glutamylating enzymes in different model organisms revealed an evolutionarily conserved role of glutamylation in cilia and flagella. In motile cilia, glutamylation regulates beating behavior (Janke et al., 2005; Pathak et al., 2007; Ikegami et al., 2010) via the regulation of flagellar dynein motors (Kubo et al., 2010; Suryavanshi et al., 2010). Despite the expression of multiple glutamylases in ciliated cells and tissues, depletion or knockout of single enzymes often lead to ciliary defects, particularly in motile cilia (Ikegami et al., 2010; Vogel et al., 2010; Bosch Grau et al., 2013; Lee et al., 2013), suggesting essential and nonredundant regulatory functions of these enzymes in cilia.Despite the enrichment of polyglutamylation in neuronal microtubules (Audebert et al., 1993, 1994), knockout of TTLL1, the major polyglutamylase in brain (Janke et al., 2005), did not show obvious neuronal defects in mice (Ikegami et al., 2010; Vogel et al., 2010). This suggests a tolerance of neuronal microtubules to variations in polyglutamylation.Deglutamylases, the enzymes that reverse polyglutamylation, were identified within a novel family of CCPs (Kimura et al., 2010; Rogowski et al., 2010). So far, three out of six mammalian CCPs have been shown to cleave C-terminal glutamate residues, thus catalyzing both the reversal of polyglutamylation and the removal of gene-encoded glutamates from the C termini of proteins (Fig. 3). The hydrolysis of gene-encoded glutamate residues is not restricted to tubulin, in which it generates Δ2- and Δ3-tubulin, but has also been reported for other proteins such as myosin light chain kinase (Rusconi et al., 1997; Rogowski et al., 2010). One enzyme of the CCP family, CCP5, preferentially removes branching points generated by glutamylation, thus allowing the complete reversal of the polyglutamylation modification (Kimura et al., 2010; Rogowski et al., 2010). However, CCP5 can also hydrolyze C-terminal glutamate residues from linear peptide chains similar to other members of the CCP family (Berezniuk et al., 2013).CCP1 is mutated in a well-established mouse model for neurodegeneration, the pcd (Purkinje cell degeneration) mouse (Mullen et al., 1976; Greer and Shepherd, 1982; Fernandez-Gonzalez et al., 2002). The absence of a key deglutamylase leads to strong hyperglutamylation in brain regions that undergo degeneration, such as the cerebellum and the olfactory bulb (Rogowski et al., 2010). When glutamylation levels were rebalanced by depletion or knockout of the major brain polyglutamylase TTLL1 (Rogowski et al., 2010; Berezniuk et al., 2012), Purkinje cells survived. Although the molecular mechanisms of hyperglutamylation-induced degeneration remain to be elucidated, perturbation of neuronal transport, as well as changes in the dynamics and stability of microtubules, is expected to be induced by hyperglutamylation. Increased polyglutamylation levels have been shown to affect kinesin-1–mediated transport in cultured neurons (Maas et al., 2009), and the turnover of microtubules can also be regulated by polyglutamylation via the activation of microtubule-severing enzymes such as spastin (Lacroix et al., 2010).Subtle differences in polyglutamylation can be seen on diverse microtubules in different cell types. The functions of these modifications remain to be studied; however, its wide distribution strengthens the idea that it could be involved in fine-tuning a range of microtubule functions.Polyglycylation.
Tubulin polyglycylation or glycylation, like polyglutamylation, generates side chains of glycine residues within the C-terminal tails of α- and β-tubulin (Fig. 1, A and B). The modification sites of glycylation are considered to be principally the same as for glutamylation, and indeed, both PTMs have been shown to be interdependent in cells (Rogowski et al., 2009; Wloga et al., 2009). Initially discovered on Paramecium tetraurelia tubulin (Redeker et al., 1994), glycylation has been extensively studied using two antibodies, TAP952 and AXO49 (Bressac et al., 1995; Levilliers et al., 1995; Bré et al., 1996). In contrast to polyglutamylation, glycylation is restricted to cilia and flagella in most organisms analyzed so far.Glycylating enzymes are also members of the TTLL family, and homologues of these enzymes have so far been found in all organisms with proven glycylation of ciliary axonemes (Rogowski et al., 2009; Wloga et al., 2009). In mammals, initiating (TTLL3 and TTLL8) and elongating (TTLL10) glycylases work together to generate polyglycylation (Fig. 3). In contrast, the two TTLL3 orthologues from Drosophila melanogaster can both initiate and elongate glycine side chains (Rogowski et al., 2009).In mice, motile ependymal cilia in brain ventricles acquire monoglycylation upon maturation, whereas polyglycylation is observed only after several weeks (Bosch Grau et al., 2013). Sperm flagella, in contrast, acquire long glycine chains much faster, suggesting that the extent of polyglycylation could correlate with the length of the axonemes (Rogowski et al., 2009). Depletion of glycylases in mice (ependymal cilia; Bosch Grau et al., 2013), zebrafish (Wloga et al., 2009; Pathak et al., 2011), Tetrahymena thermophila (Wloga et al., 2009), and D. melanogaster (Rogowski et al., 2009) consistently led to ciliary disassembly or severe ciliary defects. How glycylation regulates microtubule functions remains unknown; however, the observation that glycylation-depleted axonemes disassemble after initial assembly (Rogowski et al., 2009; Bosch Grau et al., 2013) suggests a role of this PTM in stabilizing axonemal microtubules. Strikingly, human TTLL10 is enzymatically inactive; thus, humans have lost the ability to elongate glycine side chains (Rogowski et al., 2009). This suggests that the elongation of the glycine side chains is not an essential aspect of the function of this otherwise critical tubulin PTM.Other tubulin PTMs.
Several other PTMs have been found on tubulin. Early studies identified tubulin phosphorylation (Eipper, 1974; Gard and Kirschner, 1985; Díaz-Nido et al., 1990); however, no specific functions were found. The perhaps best-studied phosphorylation event on tubulin takes place at serine S172 of β-tubulin (Fig. 1 A), is catalyzed by the Cdk1 (Fig. 3), and might regulate microtubule dynamics during cell division (Fourest-Lieuvin et al., 2006; Caudron et al., 2010). Tubulin can be also modified by the spleen tyrosine kinase Syk (Fig. 3; Peters et al., 1996), which might play a role in immune cells (Faruki et al., 2000; Sulimenko et al., 2006) and cell division (Zyss et al., 2005; Sulimenko et al., 2006).Polyamination has recently been discovered on brain tubulin (Song et al., 2013), after having been overlooked for many years as a result of the low solubility of polyaminated tubulin. Among several glutamine residues of α- and β-tubulin that can be polyaminated, Q15 of β-tubulin is considered the primary modification site (Fig. 1 A). Polyamination is catalyzed by transglutaminases (Fig. 3), which modify free tubulin as well as microtubules in an irreversible manner, and most likely contribute to the stabilization of microtubules (Song et al., 2013).Tubulin was also reported to be palmitoylated (Caron, 1997; Ozols and Caron, 1997; Caron et al., 2001), ubiquitinated (Ren et al., 2003; Huang et al., 2009; Xu et al., 2010), glycosylated (Walgren et al., 2003; Ji et al., 2011), arginylated (Wong et al., 2007), methylated (Xiao et al., 2010), and sumoylated (Rosas-Acosta et al., 2005). These PTMs have mostly been reported without follow-up studies, and some of them are only found in specific cell types or organisms and/or under specific metabolic conditions. Further studies will be necessary to gain insights into their potential roles for the regulation of the microtubule cytoskeleton.Current advances and future perspectives
The molecular heterogeneity of microtubules, generated by the expression of different tubulin isotypes and by the PTM of tubulin has fascinated the scientific community for ∼40 years. Although many important advances have been made in the past decade, the dissection of the molecular mechanisms and a comprehensive understanding of the biological functions of tubulin isotypes and PTMs will be a challenging field of research in the near future.Direct measurements of the impact of tubulin heterogeneity.
The most direct and reliable type of experiments to determine the impact of tubulin heterogeneity on microtubule behavior are in vitro measurements with purified proteins. However, most biophysical work on microtubules has been performed with tubulin purified from bovine, ovine, or porcine brains, which can be obtained in large quantities and with a high degree of purity and activity (Vallee, 1986; Castoldi and Popov, 2003). Brain tubulin is a mixture of different tubulin isotypes and is heavily posttranslationally modified and thus inept for investigating the functions of tubulin heterogeneity (Denoulet et al., 1986; Cambray-Deakin and Burgoyne, 1987b; Paturle et al., 1989; Eddé et al., 1990). Thus, pure, recombinant tubulin will be essential to dissect the roles of different tubulin isoforms and PTMs.Attempts to produce recombinant, functional α- and β-tubulin in bacteria have failed so far (Yaffe et al., 1988), most likely because of the absence of the extensive tubulin-specific folding machinery (Yaffe et al., 1992; Gao et al., 1993; Tian et al., 1996; Vainberg et al., 1998) in prokaryotes. An alternative source of tubulin with less isotype heterogeneity and with almost no PTMs is endogenous tubulin from cell lines such as HeLa, which in the past has been purified using a range of biochemical procedures (Bulinski and Borisy, 1979; Weatherbee et al., 1980; Farrell, 1982; Newton et al., 2002; Fourest-Lieuvin, 2006). Such tubulin can be further modified with tubulin-modifying enzymes, such as polyglutamylases, either by expressing those enzymes in the cells before tubulin purification (Lacroix and Janke, 2011) or in vitro with purified enzymes (Vemu et al., 2014). Despite some technical limitations of these methods, HeLa tubulin modified in cells has been successfully used in an in vitro study on the role of polyglutamylation in microtubule severing (Lacroix et al., 2010).Naturally occurring variants of tubulin isotypes and PTMs can be purified from different organisms, organs, or cell types, but obviously, only some combinations of tubulin isotypes and PTMs can be obtained by this approach. The recent development of an affinity purification method using the microtubule-binding TOG (tumor overexpressed gene) domain of yeast Stu2p has brought a new twist to this approach, as it allows purifying small amounts of tubulin from any cell type or tissue (Widlund et al., 2012).The absence of tubulin heterogeneity in yeast has made budding and fission yeast potential expression systems for recombinant, PTM-free tubulin (Katsuki et al., 2009; Drummond et al., 2011; Johnson et al., 2011). However, the expression of mammalian tubulin in this system has remained impossible. This problem was then partially circumvented by expressing tubulin chimeras that consist of a yeast tubulin body fused to mammalian C-terminal tubulin tails, thus mimicking different tubulin isotypes (Sirajuddin et al., 2014). Moreover, detyrosination can be generated by deleting the key C-terminal residue from endogenous or chimeric α-tubulin (Badin-Larçon et al., 2004), and polyglutamylation is generated by chemically coupling glutamate side chains to specifically engineered tubulin chimeras (Sirajuddin et al., 2014). These approaches allowed the first direct measurements of the impact of tubulin isotypes and PTMs on the behavior of molecular motors in vitro (Sirajuddin et al., 2014) and the analysis of the effects of tubulin heterogeneity on microtubule behavior and interactions inside the yeast cell (Badin-Larçon et al., 2004; Aiken et al., 2014).Currently, the most promising development has been the successful purification of fully functional recombinant tubulin from the baculovirus expression system (Minoura et al., 2013). Using this system, defined α/β-tubulin dimers can be obtained using two different epitope tags on α- and β-tubulin, respectively. Although these epitope tags are essential for separating recombinant from the endogenous tubulin, they could also affect tubulin assembly or microtubule–MAP interactions. Thus, future developments should focus on eliminating these tags.Current efforts have brought the possibility of producing recombinant tubulin into reach. Further improvement and standardization of these methods will certainly provide a breakthrough in understanding the mechanisms by which tubulin heterogeneity contributes to microtubule functions.Complexity of tubulin—understanding the regulatory principles.
The diversity of tubulin genes (isotypes) and the complexity of tubulin PTMs have led to the proposal of the term “tubulin code” (Verhey and Gaertig, 2007; Wehenkel and Janke, 2014), in analogy to the previously coined histone code (Jenuwein and Allis, 2001). Tubulin molecules consist of a highly structured and thus evolutionarily conserved tubulin body and the unstructured and less conserved C-terminal tails (Nogales et al., 1998). As PTMs and sequence variations within the tubulin body are expected to affect the conserved tubulin fold and therefore the properties of the microtubule lattice, they are not likely to be involved in generating the tubulin code. In contrast, modulations of the C-terminal tails could encode signals on the microtubule surface without perturbing basic microtubule functions and properties (Figs. 1 A and and4).4). Indeed, the highest degree of gene-encoded diversity (Fig. 2) and the highest density and complexity of PTMs (Fig. 1) are found within these tail domains.Open in a separate windowFigure 4.Molecular components of the tubulin code. Schematic representation of potential coding elements that could generate specific signals for the tubulin code. (A) The length of the C-terminal tails of different tubulin isotypes differ significantly (Fig. 2) and could have an impact on the interactions between microtubules and MAPs. (B) Tubulin C-terminal tails are rich in charged amino acid residues. The distribution of these residues and local densities of charges could influence the electrostatic interactions with the tails and the readers. (C) Although each glutamate residue within the C-terminal tails could be considered a potential modification site, only some sites have been found highly occupied in tubulin purifications from native sources. This indicates selectivity of the modification reactions, which can participate in the generation of specific modification patterns (see D). Modification sites might be distinguished by their neighboring amino acid residues, which could create specific modification epitopes. (D) As a result of the large number of modification sites and the variability of side chains, a large variety of modification patterns could be generated within a single C-terminal tail of tubulin. (E) Modification patterns as shown in D can be distinct between α- and β-tubulin. These modification patterns could be differentially distributed at the surface of the microtubule lattice, thus generating a higher-order patterning. Tub, tubulin. For color coding, see Fig. 2.Considering the number of tubulin isotypes plus all potential combinations of PTMs (e.g., each glutamate residue within the C-terminal tubulin tail could be modified by either polyglutamylation or polyglycylation, each of them generating side chains of different lengths; Fig. 4), the number of distinct signals generated by the potential tubulin code would be huge. However, as many of these potential signals represent chemical structures that are similar and might not be reliably distinguished by readout mechanisms, it is possible that the tubulin code generates probabilistic signals. In this scenario, biochemically similar modifications would have similar functional readouts, and marginal differences between those signals would only bias biological processes but not determine them. This stands in contrast to the concept of the histone code, in which precise patterns of different PTMs on the histone proteins encode distinct biological signals.The concept of probabilistic signaling is already inscribed in the machinery that generates the tubulin code. Polyglutamylases and polyglycylases from the TTLL family have preferential activities for either α- or β-tubulin and for generating different lengths of the branched glutamate or glycine chains. Although under conditions of low enzyme concentrations, as found in most cells and tissues, the enzymes seem to selectively generate their preferential type of PTM, higher enzyme concentrations induce a more promiscuous behavior, leading, for instance, to a loss of selectivity for α- or β-tubulin (van Dijk et al., 2007). Similarly, the modifying enzymes might prefer certain modification sites within the C-terminal tails of tubulin but might be equally able to modify other sites, which could be locally regulated in cells. For example, β-tubulin isotypes isolated from mammalian brain were initially found to be glutamylated on single residues (Alexander et al., 1991; Rüdiger et al., 1992), which in the light of the comparably low sensitivity of mass spectrometry at the time might rather indicate a preferential than a unique modification of these sites. Nevertheless, the neuron-specific polyglutamylase for β-tubulin TTLL7 (Ikegami et al., 2006) can incorporate glutamate onto many more modification sites of β-tubulin in vitro (Mukai et al., 2009), which clearly indicates that not all of the possible modification events take place under physiological conditions.Several examples supporting a probabilistic signaling mode of the tubulin code are found in the recent literature. In T. thermophila, a ciliate without tubulin isotype diversity (Gaertig et al., 1993) but with a huge repertoire of tubulin PTMs and tubulin-modifying enzymes (Janke et al., 2005), tubulin can be easily mutagenized to experimentally eliminate sites for PTMs. Mutagenesis of the most commonly occupied glutamylation/glycylation sites within the β-tubulin tails did not generate a clear decrease of glycylation levels nor did it cause obvious phenotypic alterations. This indicates that the modifying enzymes can deviate toward alternative modification sites and that similar PTMs on different sites can compensate the functions of the mutated site. However, when all of the key modification sites were mutated, glycylation became prominently decreased, which led to severe phenotypes, including lethality (Xia et al., 2000). Most strikingly, these phenotypes could be recovered by replacing the C-terminal tail of α-tubulin with the nonmutated β-tubulin tail. This α–β-tubulin chimera became overglycylated and functionally compensated for the absence of modification sites on β-tubulin. The conclusion of this study is that PTM- and isotype-generated signals can fulfill a biological function within a certain range of tolerance.But how efficient is such compensation? The answer can be found in a variety of already described deletion mutants for tubulin-modifying enzymes in different model organisms. Most single-gene knockouts for TTLL genes (glutamylases or glycylases) did not result in prominent phenotypic alterations in mice, even for enzymes that are ubiquitously expressed. Only some highly specialized microtubule structures show functional aberrations upon the deletion of a single enzyme. These “tips of the iceberg” are usually the motile cilia and sperm flagella, which carry very high levels of polyglutamylation and polyglycylation (Bré et al., 1996; Kann et al., 1998; Rogowski et al., 2009). It thus appears that some microtubules are essentially dependent on the generation of specific PTM patterns, whereas others can tolerate changes and appear to function normally. How “normal” these functions are remains to be investigated in future studies. It is possible that defects are subtle and thus overlooked but could become functionally important under specific conditions.A tubulin code also requires readout mechanisms. The most likely “readers” of the tubulin code are MAPs and molecular motors. Considering the probabilistic signaling hypothesis, the expected effects of the signals would be in most cases rather gradual changes, for instance, to fine-tune molecular motor traffic and/or to bias motors toward defined microtubule tracks but not to obliterate motor activity or MAP binding to microtubules. An in vitro study using recombinant tubulin chimeras purified from yeast confirmed this notion (Sirajuddin et al., 2014). By analyzing which elements of the tubulin code can regulate the velocity and processivity of the molecular motors kinesin and dynein, these researchers found that the C-terminal tails of α- and β-tubulin differentially influence the kinetic parameters of the tested motors; however, the modulation was rather modest. One of their striking observations was that a single lysine residue, present in the C-terminal tails of two β-tubulin isotypes (Figs. 2 and and4),4), significantly affected motor traffic and that this effect can be counterbalanced by polyglutamylation. These observations are the first in vitro evidence for the interdependence of different elements of the tubulin code and provide another indication for its probabilistic mode of signaling.Future directions.
One of the greatest technological challenges to understanding the function of the tubulin code is to detect and interpret subtle and complex regulatory events generated by this code. It will thus be instrumental to further develop tools to better distinguish graded changes in PTM levels on microtubules in cells and tissues (Magiera and Janke, 2013) and to reliably measure subtle modulations of microtubule behavior in reconstituted systems.The current advances in the field and especially the availability of whole-organism models, as well as first insights into the pathological role of tubulin mutations (Tischfield et al., 2011), are about to transform our way of thinking about the regulation of microtubule cytoskeleton. Tubulin heterogeneity generates complex probabilistic signals that cannot be clearly attributed to single biological functions in most cases and that are not essential for most cellular processes. Nevertheless, it has been conserved throughout evolution of eukaryotes and can hardly be dismissed as not important. To understand the functional implications of these processes, we might be forced to reconsider how we define biologically important events and how we measure events that might encode probabilistic signals. The answers to these questions could provide novel insights into how complex systems, such as cells and organisms, are sustained throughout difficult and challenging life cycles, resist to environmental stress and diseases, and have the flexibility needed to succeed in evolution. 相似文献19.
Cynthia J. Sakofsky 《Critical reviews in biochemistry and molecular biology》2017,52(4):395-413
Break-induced replication (BIR) is an important pathway specializing in repair of one-ended double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs). This type of DSB break typically arises at collapsed replication forks or at eroded telomeres. BIR initiates by invasion of a broken DNA end into a homologous template followed by initiation of DNA synthesis that can proceed for hundreds of kilobases. This synthesis is drastically different from S-phase replication in that instead of a replication fork, BIR proceeds via a migrating bubble and is associated with conservative inheritance of newly synthesized DNA. This unusual mode of DNA replication is responsible for frequent genetic instabilities associated with BIR, including hyper-mutagenesis, which can lead to the formation of mutation clusters, extensive loss of heterozygosity, chromosomal translocations, copy-number variations and complex genomic rearrangements. In addition to budding yeast experimental systems that were initially employed to investigate eukaryotic BIR, recent studies in different organisms including humans, have provided multiple examples of BIR initiated within different cellular contexts, including collapsed replication fork and telomere maintenance in the absence of telomerase. In addition, significant progress has been made towards understanding microhomology-mediated BIR (MMBIR) that can promote complex chromosomal rearrangements, including those associated with cancer and those leading to a number of neurological disorders in humans. 相似文献
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