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1.
Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol ; 39: 331-361, 2023 10 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37843925

ABSTRACT

Microtubules are essential dynamic polymers composed of α/ß-tubulin heterodimers. They support intracellular trafficking, cell division, cellular motility, and other essential cellular processes. In many species, both α-tubulin and ß-tubulin are encoded by multiple genes with distinct expression profiles and functionality. Microtubules are further diversified through abundant posttranslational modifications, which are added and removed by a suite of enzymes to form complex, stereotyped cellular arrays. The genetic and chemical diversity of tubulin constitute a tubulin code that regulates intrinsic microtubule properties and is read by cellular effectors, such as molecular motors and microtubule-associated proteins, to provide spatial and temporal specificity to microtubules in cells. In this review, we synthesize the rapidly expanding tubulin code literature and highlight limitations and opportunities for the field. As complex microtubule arrays underlie essential physiological processes, a better understanding of how cells employ the tubulin code has important implications for human disease ranging from cancer to neurological disorders.


Subject(s)
Microtubules , Tubulin , Humans , Tubulin/genetics , Tubulin/chemistry , Tubulin/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Protein Processing, Post-Translational/genetics , Cell Movement
2.
Dev Cell ; 57(21): 2497-2513.e6, 2022 11 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36347241

ABSTRACT

Microtubules have spatiotemporally complex posttranslational modification patterns. How cells interpret this tubulin modification code is largely unknown. We show that C. elegans katanin, a microtubule severing AAA ATPase mutated in microcephaly and critical for cell division, axonal elongation, and cilia biogenesis, responds precisely, differentially, and combinatorially to three chemically distinct tubulin modifications-glycylation, glutamylation, and tyrosination-but is insensitive to acetylation. Glutamylation and glycylation are antagonistic rheostats with glycylation protecting microtubules from severing. Katanin exhibits graded and divergent responses to glutamylation on the α- and ß-tubulin tails, and these act combinatorially. The katanin hexamer central pore constrains the polyglutamate chain patterns on ß-tails recognized productively. Elements distal to the katanin AAA core sense α-tubulin tyrosination, and detyrosination downregulates severing. The multivalent microtubule recognition that enables katanin to read multiple tubulin modification inputs explains in vivo observations and illustrates how effectors can integrate tubulin code signals to produce diverse functional outcomes.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans , Tubulin , Animals , Katanin/genetics , Tubulin/metabolism , Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism , Protein Processing, Post-Translational
3.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(45): 6530-6533, 2022 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35579270

ABSTRACT

Tubulin polyglycylation is a posttranslational modification that occurs primarily on the axonemes of flagella and cilia and has been shown to be essential for proper sperm motility. Inhibitors of both the initiase and elongase ligases (TTLL8 and TTLL10) are shown to inhibit tubulin glycylation in the low micromolar range.


Subject(s)
Phosphinic Acids , Tubulin , Cilia/metabolism , Humans , Male , Microtubules/metabolism , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Sperm Motility , Tubulin/metabolism
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