Abstract

The telomere protein assemblies in different fungal lineages manifest quite profound structural and functional divergence, implying a high degree of flexibility and adaptability. Previous comparative analyses of fungal telomeres have focused on the role of telomere sequence alterations in promoting the evolution of corresponding proteins, particularly in budding and fission yeast. However, emerging evidence suggests that even in fungi with the canonical 6-bp telomere repeat unit, there are significant remodeling of the telomere assembly. Indeed, a new protein family can be recruited to serve dedicated telomere functions, and then experience subsequent loss in sub-branches of the clade. An especially interesting example is the Tay1 family of proteins, which emerged in fungi prior to the divergence of basidiomycetes from ascomycetes. This relatively recent protein family appears to have acquired its telomere DNA-binding activity through the modification of another Myb-containing protein. Members of the Tay1 family evidently underwent rather dramatic functional diversification, serving, e.g., as transcription factors in fission yeast while acting to promote telomere maintenance in basidiomycetes and some hemi-ascomycetes. Remarkably, despite its distinct structural organization and evolutionary origin, a basidiomycete Tay1 appears to promote telomere replication using the same mechanism as mammalian TRF1, i.e., by recruiting and regulating Blm helicase activity. This apparent example of convergent evolution at the molecular level highlight the ability of telomere proteins to acquire new interaction targets. The remarkable evolutionary history of Tay1 illustrates the power of protein modularity and the facile acquisition of nucleic acid/protein-binding activity to promote telomere flexibility.

Highlights

  • Linear eukaryotic chromosome ends are stabilized by protein assemblies that organize the repetitive terminal DNA sequence (∼5–20 base pairs per repeat unit) into protective structures that are resistant to aberrant degradation and recombination (O’Sullivan and Karlseder, 2010; Jain and Cooper, 2011; de Lange, 2018)

  • Tay1 emerged in an organism where the telomere functions are presumably well served by a TRF-like protein

  • Any telomere function acquired by Tay1 in this context was likely to be non-essential or redundant – as evident from the phenotypes of the Umtay1 mutant

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Summary

Introduction

Linear eukaryotic chromosome ends are stabilized by protein assemblies that organize the repetitive terminal DNA sequence (∼5–20 base pairs per repeat unit) into protective structures that are resistant to aberrant degradation and recombination (O’Sullivan and Karlseder, 2010; Jain and Cooper, 2011; de Lange, 2018). Members of Tay1 are confined to Ascomycota and Basidiomycota, and while they all bind the 5 -TTAGGG3 /5 -CCCTAA-3 repeat unit with high affinity and sequence specificity, these proteins mediate distinct telomeric and non-telomeric functions in different fungi.

Results
Conclusion

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