National Repository of Grey Literature 1 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Polyglutamylation as a Posttranslational Tubulin Modification
Bašta, Miroslav ; Bařinka, Cyril (advisor) ; Dráber, Pavel (referee)
α-tubulin is an essential protein for every eukaryotic cell. Together with β-tubulin, it polymerises into microtubules and participates thus in creating and maintaining cellular structures and presents a cell-wide interaction platform for a plethora of microtubule associating proteins. Primary sequences of the disordered C-termini of both α- and β-tubulin are the least conserved among tubulin isotypes and their variability is further increased by the presence of various post-translational modifications. The genetically coded, tyrosinated C-terminus of α-tubulin can be either shortened by one, two or three amino acids resulting in detyrosinated, Δ2, or Δ3 variants, respectively or it can be extended by the addition of polyglutamate or polyglycine chains. The tubulin tyrosine ligase-like (TTLL) protein family consists of 14 enzymes that participate in tubulin glutamylation, glycylation, and tyrosination. The glutamylases have two distinct activities, initiation and elongation of the polyglutamate chain. Initiases link the first glutamate residue to the γ-carboxyl group of one of the glutamates of tubulin C-termini to create a fork in the amino acid sequence. Elongases then recognise the branching glutamate and build up the polyglutamate sidechain one residue at the time. TTLL11 is an elongase of...

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