4.8 Article

Evolutionary Divergence of Enzymatic Mechanisms for Posttranslational Polyglycylation

Journal

CELL
Volume 137, Issue 6, Pages 1076-1087

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2009.05.020

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CNRS
  2. Universities Montpellier 2 and 1
  3. Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer (ARC) [CR504/7817, CR504/3140, CR504/4894]
  4. French National Research Agency (ANR) [05-JCJC-0035, 08-JCJC-0007]
  5. Ligue contre le Cancer fellowship [JG/VP-5454]
  6. EMBO long-term fellowship ALTF [5462006]
  7. NSF [MBC-033965]

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Polyglycylation is a posttranslational modification that generates glycine side chains on proteins. Here we identify a family of evolutionarily conserved glycine ligases that modify tubulin using different enzymatic mechanisms. In mammals, two distinct enzyme types catalyze the initiation and elongation steps of polyglycylation, whereas Drosophila glycylases are bifunctional. We further show that the human elongating glycylase has lost enzymatic activity due to two amino acid changes, suggesting that the functions of protein glycylation could be sufficiently fulfilled by monoglycylation. Depletion of a glycylase in Drosophila using RNA interference results in adult flies with strongly decreased total glycylation levels and male sterility associated with defects in sperm individualization and axonemal maintenance. A more severe RNAi depletion is lethal at early developmental stages, indicating that protein glycylation is essential. Together with the observation that multiple proteins are glycylated, our functional data point towards a general role of glycylation in protein functions.

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