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The distinct initiation sites and processing activities of TTLL4 and TTLL7 in glutamylation of brain tubulin.

Authors :
Xinyue Zhang
Xiangxiao Li
Wei Chen
Yujuan Wang
Lei Diao
Yan Gao
Heyi Wang
Lan Bao
Xin Liang
Hui-Yuan Wu
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. Jul2023, Vol. 299 Issue 7, p1-17. 17p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Mammalian brain tubulins undergo a reversible posttranslational modification--polyglutamylation--which attaches a secondary polyglutamate chain to the primary sequence of proteins. Loss of its erasers can disrupt polyglutamylation homeostasis and cause neurodegeneration. Tubulin tyrosine ligase like 4 (TTLL4) and TTLL7 were known to modify tubulins, both with preference for the β-isoform, but differently contribute to neurodegeneration. However, differences in their biochemical properties and functions remain largely unknown. Here, using an antibody-based method, we characterized the properties of a purified recombinant TTLL4 and confirmed its sole role as an initiator, unlike TTLL7, which both initiates and elongates the side chains. Unexpectedly, TTLL4 produced stronger glutamylation immunosignals for a-isoform than β-isoform in brain tubulins. Contrarily, the recombinant TTLL7 raised comparable glutamylation immunoreactivity for two isoforms. Given the site selectivity of the glutamylation antibody, we analyzed modification sites of two enzymes. Tandem mass spectrometry analysis revealed their incompatible site selectivity on synthetic peptides mimicking carboxyl termini of a1- and β2-tubulins and a recombinant tubulin. Particularly, in the recombinant a1A-tubulin, a novel region was found glutamylated by TTLL4 and TTLL7, that again at distinct sites. These results pinpoint different site specificities between two enzymes. Moreover, TTLL7 exhibits less efficiency to elongate microtubules premodified by TTLL4, suggesting possible regulation of TTLL7 elongation activity by TTLL4-initiated sites. Finally, we showed that kinesin behaves differentially on microtubules modified by two enzymes. This study underpins the different reactivity, site selectivity, and function of TTLL4 and TTLL7 on brain tubulins and sheds light on their distinct role in vivo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
299
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169843247
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2023.104923