ESCRT公司
泛素
生物
细胞生物学
胞质分裂
古细菌
拉布
基因
遗传学
内体
细胞分裂
细胞内
GTP酶
细胞
作者
Tomoyuki Hatano,Saravanan Palani,Dimitra Papatziamou,Ralf Salzer,Diorge P. Souza,Daniel Tamarit,Mehul Makwana,Antonia Potter,Alexandra Haig,Wenjue Xu,David Townsend,David L. Rochester,Dom Bellini,Hamdi M. A. Hussain,Thijs J. G. Ettema,Jan Löwe,Buzz Baum,Nicholas P. Robinson,Mohan K. Balasubramanian
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-30656-2
摘要
Abstract The ESCRT machinery, comprising of multiple proteins and subcomplexes, is crucial for membrane remodelling in eukaryotic cells, in processes that include ubiquitin-mediated multivesicular body formation, membrane repair, cytokinetic abscission, and virus exit from host cells. This ESCRT system appears to have simpler, ancient origins, since many archaeal species possess homologues of ESCRT-III and Vps4, the components that execute the final membrane scission reaction, where they have been shown to play roles in cytokinesis, extracellular vesicle formation and viral egress. Remarkably, metagenome assemblies of Asgard archaea, the closest known living relatives of eukaryotes, were recently shown to encode homologues of the entire cascade involved in ubiquitin-mediated membrane remodelling, including ubiquitin itself, components of the ESCRT-I and ESCRT-II subcomplexes, and ESCRT-III and Vps4. Here, we explore the phylogeny, structure, and biochemistry of Asgard homologues of the ESCRT machinery and the associated ubiquitylation system. We provide evidence for the ESCRT-I and ESCRT-II subcomplexes being involved in ubiquitin-directed recruitment of ESCRT-III, as it is in eukaryotes. Taken together, our analyses suggest a pre-eukaryotic origin for the ubiquitin-coupled ESCRT system and a likely path of ESCRT evolution via a series of gene duplication and diversification events.
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