Fitzpatrick Institute for Photonics Fitzpatrick Institute for Photonics
Pratt School of Engineering
Duke University

 HOME > pratt > FIP    Search Help Login pdf version printable version 

Publications [#113233] of Harold P. Erickson

Papers Published

  1. HP Erickson, Evolution of the cytoskeleton., BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology, vol. 29 no. 7 (July, 2007), pp. 668-77, ISSN 0265-9247 [doi]
    (last updated on 2013/05/16)

    Abstract:
    The eukaryotic cytoskeleton appears to have evolved from ancestral precursors related to prokaryotic FtsZ and MreB. FtsZ and MreB show 40-50% sequence identity across different bacterial and archaeal species. Here I suggest that this represents the limit of divergence that is consistent with maintaining their functions for cytokinesis and cell shape. Previous analyses have noted that tubulin and actin are highly conserved across eukaryotic species, but so divergent from their prokaryotic relatives as to be hardly recognizable from sequence comparisons. One suggestion for this extreme divergence of tubulin and actin is that it occurred as they evolved very different functions from FtsZ and MreB. I will present new arguments favoring this suggestion, and speculate on pathways. Moreover, the extreme conservation of tubulin and actin across eukaryotic species is not due to an intrinsic lack of variability, but is attributed to their acquisition of elaborate mechanisms for assembly dynamics and their interactions with multiple motor and binding proteins. A new structure-based sequence alignment identifies amino acids that are conserved from FtsZ to tubulins. The highly conserved amino acids are not those forming the subunit core or protofilament interface, but those involved in binding and hydrolysis of GTP.

    Keywords:
    Amino Acid Sequence • Animals • Bacterial Proteins • Cytoskeletal Proteins • Cytoskeleton • Evolution, Molecular* • Humans • Molecular Sequence Data • Sequence Homology, Amino Acid • Tubulin • chemistry • genetics • metabolism • metabolism*


Duke University * Pratt * Reload * Login