| Literature DB >> 28003474 |
Eelco Tromer1,2, Debora Bade1, Berend Snel3, Geert J P L Kops4,5,6.
Abstract
The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) maintains genomic integrity by preventing progression of mitotic cell division until all chromosomes are stably attached to spindle microtubules. The SAC critically relies on the paralogues Bub1 and BubR1/Mad3, which integrate kinetochore-spindle attachment status with generation of the anaphase inhibitory complex MCC. We previously reported on the widespread occurrences of independent gene duplications of an ancestral 'MadBub' gene in eukaryotic evolution and the striking parallel subfunctionalization that lead to loss of kinase function in BubR1/Mad3-like paralogues. Here, we present an elaborate subfunctionalization analysis of the Bub1/BubR1 gene family and perform de novo sequence discovery in a comparative phylogenomics framework to trace the distribution of ancestral sequence features to extant paralogues throughout the eukaryotic tree of life. We show that known ancestral sequence features are consistently retained in the same functional paralogue: GLEBS/CMI/CDII/kinase in the Bub1-like and KEN1/KEN2/D-Box in the BubR1/Mad3-like. The recently described ABBA motif can be found in either or both paralogues. We however discovered two additional ABBA motifs that flank KEN2. This cassette of ABBA1-KEN2-ABBA2 forms a strictly conserved module in all ancestral and BubR1/Mad3-like proteins, suggestive of a specific and crucial SAC function. Indeed, deletion of the ABBA motifs in human BUBR1 abrogates the SAC and affects APC/C-Cdc20 interactions. Our detailed comparative genomics analyses thus enabled discovery of a conserved cassette of motifs essential for the SAC and shows how this approach can be used to uncover hitherto unrecognized functional protein features.Entities:
Keywords: evolutionary genomics; kinetochore; mitosis; short linear motif; spindle checkpoint
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28003474 PMCID: PMC5204127 DOI: 10.1098/rsob.160315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Biol ISSN: 2046-2441 Impact factor: 6.411
Figure 1.Fate of conserved functional sequence features after 16 independent duplications of the MADBUB gene family throughout eukaryotic evolution (a) Overview of the de novo sequence discovery pipeline ConFeaX including the ancestral conserved features of a search against the eukaryotic MADBUB gene family. The consensus sequences of the detected conserved motifs are depicted as a sequence logo (colours reflect distinct amino acid properties and height of the letters indicates conservation of amino acids). Each feature is assigned a differently coloured shape. (b) Cartoon of the evolutionary scenario of 16 independent duplications of the MADBUB gene family throughout eukaryotic evolution, including a projection of conserved features onto the linear protein representation (on scale). Gene duplications are indicated by an arrow (red: high confidence, orange: likely). The subfunctionalized paralogues MAD and BUB are coloured brown and blue, respectively. Numbers indicate the clades in which the duplications occurred: 1, Mucorales; 2, Saccharomycetaceae; 3, schizosaccharomycetes; 4, pucciniomycetes: 5, agaricomycetes (excluding early branching species); 6, vertebrates; 7, teleost fish; 8, nematodes; 9, diptera (flies); 10, Albuginaceae (oomycete); 11, Ectocarpales (brown algae); 12, Aureococcus (harmful algae bloom); 13, bryophytes (mosses); 14, tracheophytes (vascular plants); 15, magnoliaphytes (flowering plants); 16, Naegleria.
Figure 2.Coevolution of conserved features signify subfunctionalization of MAD and BUB after MADBUB duplication. (a) Average clustering based on Pearson distances of conserved ancestral feature correlation matrix (distance = 1 − r) of all MADBUB paralogues from figure 1. Red and blue indicate co-presence or -absence of features in the same paralogue, respectively. (b) Evolutionary scenario of MADBUB subfunctionalization: MAD (cytosol) as a SAC effector and BUB (kinetochore) involved in SAC signal formation and kinetochore microtubule attachment.
Figure 3.The evolutionary conserved cassette ABBA1-KEN2-ABBA2 in BUBR1 is essential for SAC signalling. (a) Alignment of ABBA1-KEN2-ABBA2 cassette (red). Linkers (black) between ABBA motifs and KEN2 are indicated by {n}. The sequence logo on top is representative for all eukaryotic sequences (colours reflect distinct amino acid properties and height of the letters indicates conservation of amino acids). (b) Schematic representation of LAP-hBUBR1 mutants. Colour coding is consistent for each mutant in this figure. (c) Immunoblots of BUBR1 and tubulin of mitotic lysates of HeLa-FlpIn cell lines stably expressing LAP-tagged BUBR1 proteins. Cells were treated with siRNA (40 nM) for 48 h and cells were released and arrested into Taxol after double thymidine block. (e) Time-lapse analysis of HeLa-FlpIn cells expressing hBUBR1 mutants, treated with 20 μM STLC. Data (N = 3 with n = 50 per experiment) indicate the mean of cumulative fraction of cells that exit mitosis after nuclear envelope breakdown. Transparent regions represent the standard error of the mean. Values between braces {} indicate the median value. Cells were scored by cell morphology using DIC imaging; see (d) for examples of SAC deficient (ΔABBA1/2) and proficient cells (wild-type). Only YFP-positive cells were considered for analyses. (f) Immunoblots of GFP, APC3 and CDC20 in LAP-BUBR1 precipitations (LAP-pulldown) in whole cell lysates of mitotic HeLa-FlpIn cells expressing LAP-BUBR1 mutant constructs. The mean and standard deviation values of three independent APC3/GFP co-immunoprecipitation experiments for all mutant LAP-BUBR1 cell lines are normalized to wild-type LAP-BUBR1 and depicted below the immunoblots.