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Conserved GTPase mechanism in bacterial FtsZ and archaeal tubulin filaments.

José M AndreuFederico M RuizCarlos Fernández-Tornero
Published in: The FEBS journal (2022)
Self-assembling protein filaments are at the heart of cell function. Among them, tubulin-like proteins are essential for cell division, DNA segregation and cytoskeletal functions across the domains of life. FtsZ and tubulin share their core structures, a characteristic nucleotide-binding pocket and similar protofilament architecture. GTP hydrolysis between consecutive subunits drives their assembly dynamics. Two recent studies provide previously missing, filament atomic structures of bacterial FtsZ and a recently discovered archaeal tubulin in their nucleotide triphosphate-bound states. Both filament structures reveal strikingly conserved interfacial GTPase active sites, with Mg 2+ and K + /Na + cations and an NxDxxD/E triad of catalytic residues, probably inherited from the common ancestor of FtsZs and tubulins. Moreover, both proteins exhibit nucleotide-regulated subunit association mediated by interfacial water bridges, as well as polymerization-induced structural changes, likely enabling related dynamic assembly mechanisms.
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