Turk Erin, Wills Airon A, Kwon Taejoon, Sedzinski Jakub, Wallingford John B, Stearns Tim
Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Department of Molecular Biosciences and Center for Systems and Synthetic Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA.
Curr Biol. 2015 Aug 17;25(16):2177-83. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.06.063. Epub 2015 Jul 30.
There are six members of the tubulin superfamily in eukaryotes. Alpha- and beta-tubulin form a heterodimer that polymerizes to form microtubules, and gamma-tubulin nucleates microtubules as a component of the gamma-tubulin ring complex. Alpha-, beta-, and gamma-tubulin are conserved in all eukaryotes. In contrast, delta- and epsilon-tubulin are conserved in many, but not all, eukaryotes and are associated with centrioles, although their molecular function is unclear. Zeta-tubulin is the sixth and final member of the tubulin superfamily and is largely uncharacterized. We find that zeta-, epsilon-, and delta-tubulin form an evolutionarily co-conserved module, the ZED module, that has been lost at several junctions in eukaryotic evolution and that zeta- and delta-tubulin are evolutionarily interchangeable. Humans lack zeta-tubulin but have delta-tubulin. In Xenopus multiciliated cells, zeta-tubulin is a component of the basal foot, a centriolar appendage that connects centrioles to the apical cytoskeleton, and co-localizes there with epsilon-tubulin. Depletion of zeta-tubulin results in disorganization of centriole distribution and polarity in multiciliated cells. In contrast with multiciliated cells, zeta-tubulin in cycling cells does not localize to centrioles and is associated with the TRiC/CCT cytoplasmic chaperone complex. We conclude that zeta-tubulin facilitates interactions between the centrioles and the apical cytoskeleton as a component of the basal foot in differentiated cells and propose that the ZED tubulins are important for centriole functionalization and orientation of centrioles with respect to cellular polarity axes.
真核生物中有六个微管蛋白超家族成员。α-微管蛋白和β-微管蛋白形成异源二聚体,该二聚体聚合形成微管,而γ-微管蛋白作为γ-微管蛋白环复合物的一个组分使微管成核。α-、β-和γ-微管蛋白在所有真核生物中都是保守的。相比之下,δ-微管蛋白和ε-微管蛋白在许多但并非所有的真核生物中是保守的,并且与中心粒相关,尽管它们的分子功能尚不清楚。ζ-微管蛋白是微管蛋白超家族的第六个也是最后一个成员,在很大程度上尚未得到充分研究。我们发现ζ-、ε-和δ-微管蛋白形成了一个进化上共同保守的模块,即ZED模块,该模块在真核生物进化的几个节点处丢失,并且ζ-微管蛋白和δ-微管蛋白在进化上是可互换的。人类缺乏ζ-微管蛋白但有δ-微管蛋白。在非洲爪蟾的多纤毛细胞中,ζ-微管蛋白是基足的一个组分,基足是一种将中心粒连接到顶端细胞骨架的中心粒附属物,并且在那里与ε-微管蛋白共定位。ζ-微管蛋白的缺失导致多纤毛细胞中中心粒分布和极性的紊乱。与多纤毛细胞不同,处于细胞周期中的细胞中的ζ-微管蛋白并不定位于中心粒,而是与TRiC/CCT细胞质伴侣复合物相关。我们得出结论,ζ-微管蛋白作为分化细胞中基足的一个组分促进了中心粒与顶端细胞骨架之间的相互作用,并提出ZED微管蛋白对于中心粒功能化以及中心粒相对于细胞极性轴的定向很重要。