Evolutionary cell biology traces the rise of the exomer complex in Fungi from an ancient eukaryotic component
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ramírez-Macías, Inmaculada; Barlow, Lael D.; Anton, Carlos; Spang, Anne; Roncero, Cesar; Dacks, Joel B.Editorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Exomer Evolutionary cell biology Eukariotes
Fecha
2018-07-24Referencia bibliográfica
Ramirez-Macias I, Barlow LD, Anton C, Spang A, Roncero C, Dacks JB. Evolutionary cell biology traces the rise of the exomer complex in Fungi from an ancient eukaryotic component. Sci Rep. 2018 Jul 24;8(1):11154. PMID: 30042439; PMCID: PMC6057913. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-29416-4
Patrocinador
USAL predoctoral fellowship; CICYT/FEDER Spanish BFU2013-48582-C2-1-P and BFU2017-84508-P; University of Basel; Swiss National Science Foundation (310030B_163480); Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery Grant (RES0021028)Resumen
Cargo is transported from the trans-Golgi Network to the plasma membrane by adaptor complexes, which are pan-eukaryotic components. However, in yeast, cargo can also be exported by the exomer complex, a heterotetrameric protein complex consisting of two copies of Chs5, and any two members of four paralogous proteins (ChAPs). To understand the larger relevance of exomer, its phylogenetic distribution and function outside of yeast need to be explored. We find that the four ChAP proteins are derived from gene duplications after the divergence of Yarrowia from the remaining Saccharomycotina, with BC8 paralogues (Bch2 and Chs6) being more diverged relative to the BB8 paralogues (Bch1 and Bud7), suggesting neofunctionalization. Outside Ascomycota, a single preduplicate ChAP is present in nearly all Fungi and in diverse eukaryotes, but has been repeatedly lost. Chs5, however, is a fungal specific feature, appearing coincidentally with the loss of AP-4. In contrast, the ChAP protein is a wide-spread, yet uncharacterized, membrane-trafficking component, adding one more piece to the increasingly complex machinery deduced as being present in our ancient eukaryotic ancestor.





