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Publication : Structural basis for polyglutamate chain initiation and elongation by TTLL family enzymes.

First Author  Mahalingan KK Year  2020
Journal  Nat Struct Mol Biol Volume  27
Issue  9 Pages  802-813
PubMed ID  32747782 Mgi Jnum  J:297726
Mgi Id  MGI:6479192 Doi  10.1038/s41594-020-0462-0
Citation  Mahalingan KK, et al. (2020) Structural basis for polyglutamate chain initiation and elongation by TTLL family enzymes. Nat Struct Mol Biol 27(9):802-813
abstractText  Glutamylation, introduced by tubulin tyrosine ligase-like (TTLL) enzymes, is the most abundant modification of brain tubulin. Essential effector proteins read the tubulin glutamylation pattern, and its misregulation causes neurodegeneration. TTLL glutamylases post-translationally add glutamates to internal glutamates in tubulin carboxy-terminal tails (branch initiation, through an isopeptide bond), and additional glutamates can extend these (elongation). TTLLs are thought to specialize in initiation or elongation, but the mechanistic basis for regioselectivity is unknown. We present cocrystal structures of murine TTLL6 bound to tetrahedral intermediate analogs that delineate key active-site residues that make this enzyme an elongase. We show that TTLL4 is exclusively an initiase and, through combined structural and phylogenetic analyses, engineer TTLL6 into a branch-initiating enzyme. TTLL glycylases add glycines post-translationally to internal glutamates, and we find that the same active-site residues discriminate between initiase and elongase glycylases. These active-site specializations of TTLL glutamylases and glycylases ultimately yield the chemical complexity of cellular microtubules.
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