Abstract

The structure of the unique bacterial tubulin BtubA/B from Prosthecobacter is very similar to eukaryotic αβ-tubulin but, strikingly, BtubA/B fold without eukaryotic chaperones. Our sequence comparisons indicate that BtubA and BtubB do not really correspond to either α- or β-tubulin but have mosaic sequences with intertwining features from both. Their nucleotide-binding loops are more conserved, and their more divergent sequences correspond to discrete surface zones of tubulin involved in microtubule assembly and binding to eukaryotic cytosolic chaperonin, which is absent from the Prosthecobacter dejongeii draft genome. BtubA/B cooperatively assembles over a wider range of conditions than αβ-tubulin, forming pairs of protofilaments that coalesce into bundles instead of microtubules, and it lacks the ability to differentially interact with divalent cations and bind typical tubulin drugs. Assembled BtubA/B contain close to one bound GTP and GDP. Both BtubA and BtubB subunits hydrolyze GTP, leading to disassembly. The mutant BtubA/B-S144G in the tubulin signature motif GGG(T/S)G(S/T)G has strongly inhibited GTPase, but BtubA-T147G/B does not, suggesting that BtubB is a more active GTPase, like β-tubulin. BtubA/B chimera bearing the β-tubulin loops M, H1-S2, and S9-S10 in BtubB fold, assemble, and have reduced GTPase activity. However, introduction of the α-tubulin loop S9-S10 with its unique eight-residue insertion impaired folding. From the sequence analyses, its primitive assembly features, and the properties of the chimeras, we propose that BtubA/B were acquired shortly after duplication of a spontaneously folding α- and β-tubulin ancestor, possibly by horizontal gene transfer from a primitive eukaryotic cell, followed by divergent evolution.

Highlights

  • The structure of the unique bacterial tubulin BtubA/B from Prosthecobacter is very similar to eukaryotic ␣␤-tubulin but, strikingly, BtubA/B fold without eukaryotic chaperones

  • The tubulin nucleotidebinding site is conserved in BtubA/B, but the loop sequences involved in microtubule-forming contacts and CCT binding are not, presumably because they diverged when the btubA and btubB genes left the eukaryotic cell

  • The only significant hits were bacterial GroEL chaperone and the tetratricopeptide repeat in the reported kinesin light chain fragment [16]. These results suggest that BtubA/B may fold in vivo without the assistance of the tubulin chaperones

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Summary

Bacterial Tubulin Distinct Loop Sequences and Primitive

FtsZ folds spontaneously, a property associated with the absence of typical tubulin loops involved in lateral contacts in microtubule assembly and eukaryotic chaperonin CCT2 binding [13, 14]. Our results demonstrate that BtubA and BtubB have extensively intertwining ␣- and ␤-tubulin sequence features, display primitive assembly properties, and support the insertion of several tubulin loop sequences while continuing to fold in bacteria. These results suggest that BtubA/B diverged after the transfer of ancestral ␣- and ␤-tubulin genes from a primitive eukaryote, shortly after tubulin gene duplication

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