Protofilament-specific nanopatterns of tubulin post-translational modifications regulate the mechanics of ciliary beating

IF 8.1 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY Current Biology Pub Date : 2024-09-12 DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2024.08.021
Gonzalo Alvarez Viar, Nikolai Klena, Fabrizio Martino, Adrian Pascal Nievergelt, Davide Bolognini, Paola Capasso, Gaia Pigino
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Abstract

Controlling ciliary beating is essential for motility and signaling in eukaryotes. This process relies on the regulation of various axonemal proteins that assemble in stereotyped patterns onto individual microtubules of the ciliary structure. Additionally, each axonemal protein interacts exclusively with determined tubulin protofilaments of the neighboring microtubule to carry out its function. While it is known that tubulin post-translational modifications (PTMs) are important for proper ciliary motility, the mode and extent to which they contribute to these interactions remain poorly understood. Currently, the prevailing understanding is that PTMs can confer functional specialization at the level of individual microtubules. However, this paradigm falls short of explaining how the tubulin code can manage the complexity of the axonemal structure where functional interactions happen in defined patterns at the sub-microtubular scale. Here, we combine immuno-cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET), expansion microscopy, and mutant analysis to show that, in motile cilia, tubulin glycylation and polyglutamylation form mutually exclusive protofilament-specific nanopatterns at a sub-microtubular scale. These nanopatterns are consistent with the distributions of axonemal dyneins and nexin-dynein regulatory complexes, respectively, and are indispensable for their regulation during ciliary beating. Our findings offer a new paradigm for understanding how different tubulin PTMs, such as glycylation, glutamylation, acetylation, tyrosination, and detyrosination, can coexist within the ciliary structure and specialize individual protofilaments for the regulation of diverse protein complexes. The identification of a ciliary tubulin nanocode by cryo-ET suggests the need for high-resolution studies to better understand the molecular role of PTMs in other cellular compartments beyond the cilium.

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微管蛋白翻译后修饰的原丝特异性纳米模式调控纤毛跳动的力学特性
控制纤毛跳动对真核生物的运动和信号传递至关重要。这一过程依赖于各种轴丝蛋白的调节,这些蛋白以定型模式组装到纤毛结构的单个微管上。此外,每种轴突蛋白只与邻近微管的确定的微管蛋白原丝相互作用,以实现其功能。虽然众所周知,微管蛋白的翻译后修饰(PTM)对纤毛的正常运动非常重要,但人们对它们促进这些相互作用的方式和程度仍然知之甚少。目前,人们普遍认为 PTM 可在单个微管水平上赋予功能特化。然而,这种模式无法解释微管蛋白代码如何管理轴突结构的复杂性,在轴突结构中,功能性相互作用以确定的模式发生在亚微管尺度上。在这里,我们结合免疫冷冻电子断层扫描(cryo-ET)、膨胀显微镜和突变体分析,证明在运动纤毛中,管蛋白糖基化和多谷氨酰化在亚微管尺度上形成相互排斥的原丝特异性纳米模式。这些纳米图案分别与轴突动力蛋白和nexin-dynein调节复合物的分布一致,并且在纤毛跳动过程中对它们的调节是不可或缺的。我们的发现提供了一种新的范式,有助于理解不同的管蛋白 PTMs(如糖基化、谷氨酰化、乙酰化、酪氨酸化和脱酪氨酸化)如何在纤毛结构中共存,并使单个原丝特化,以调控不同的蛋白复合物。通过低温电子显微镜鉴定纤毛管蛋白纳米代码表明,有必要进行高分辨率研究,以更好地了解 PTM 在纤毛以外的其他细胞区的分子作用。
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来源期刊
Current Biology
Current Biology 生物-生化与分子生物学
CiteScore
11.80
自引率
2.20%
发文量
869
审稿时长
46 days
期刊介绍: Current Biology is a comprehensive journal that showcases original research in various disciplines of biology. It provides a platform for scientists to disseminate their groundbreaking findings and promotes interdisciplinary communication. The journal publishes articles of general interest, encompassing diverse fields of biology. Moreover, it offers accessible editorial pieces that are specifically designed to enlighten non-specialist readers.
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