4.8 Article

Zeta-Tubulin Is a Member of a Conserved Tubulin Module and Is a Component of the Centriolar Basal Foot in Multiciliated Cells

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 16, Pages 2177-2183

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.06.063

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ARRA Award from the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) [1S10RR026780-01]
  2. Gabilan Stanford Graduate Fellowship (SGF)
  3. Cancer Biology Program Training Grant [T32 CA09302]
  4. NIH [R01GM052022, R01HL117164]
  5. Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award for Postdoctoral Fellows (NIGMS) [F32GM103146]
  6. HHMI Early Investigators grant

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There are six members of the tubulin superfamily in eukaryotes [1]. 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 [2-7]. 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.

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