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In silico induced effect of N-ε-lysine acetylation on microtubule stability and subsequent interaction of microtubule-associated proteins.

Rayevsky AlexeyElijah BulgakovMohsen SharifiDariya SamofalovaDaniil OzheredovPavel KarpovSergio PantanoYaroslav Blume
Published in: Cell biology international (2023)
Plant systems have been considered valuable models for addressing fundamental questions of microtubule (MT) organization due to their considerable practical utility. Protein acetylation is a very common protein modification, and therate of acetylation can be modulated in cells in different biological states, and these changes can be detected at a molecular level. Here, we focused on K40, K112, and K394 residues as putative acetylation sites, which were shown to exist in both plants and mammals. Such residual effect of acetylation causes critical but unclear effect on MT stability. In turn, it was shown that acetylation indirectly affects the probability of interaction with different MAPs (Microtubule-associated proteins). In a multiscale study using an all-atom force field to reproduce several lattice-forming elements found on the surface the microtubule, we assembled a fragment of a plant microtubule composed of nine tubulins and used it as a model object along with the existing human complex. Triplets of tubulins assembled in a lattice cell were then simulated for both human and plant protein complexes, using a coarse-grained force field. We then analyzed the trajectories and identified some critical deformations of the MAP interaction surface. The initial coordinates were used to investigate the structural scenario in which autophagy-related protein 8 (ATG8) was able to interact with the MT fragment.
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