Guanidine hydrochloride reactivates an ancient septin hetero-oligomer assembly pathway in budding yeast

Author:

Johnson Courtney R1,Steingesser Marc G1,Weems Andrew D1,Khan Anum2,Gladfelter Amy2,Bertin Aurélie34,McMurray Michael A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, United States

2. Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, United States

3. Laboratoire Physico Chimie Curie, Institut Curie, PSL Research University, CNRS UMR 168, Paris, France

4. Sorbonne Université UPMC Univ Paris 06, Paris, France

Abstract

Septin proteins evolved from ancestral GTPases and co-assemble into hetero-oligomers and cytoskeletal filaments. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, five septins comprise two species of hetero-octamers, Cdc11/Shs1–Cdc12–Cdc3–Cdc10–Cdc10–Cdc3–Cdc12–Cdc11/Shs1. Slow GTPase activity by Cdc12 directs the choice of incorporation of Cdc11 vs Shs1, but many septins, including Cdc3, lack GTPase activity. We serendipitously discovered that guanidine hydrochloride rescues septin function in cdc10 mutants by promoting assembly of non-native Cdc11/Shs1–Cdc12–Cdc3–Cdc3–Cdc12–Cdc11/Shs1 hexamers. We provide evidence that in S. cerevisiae Cdc3 guanidinium occupies the site of a ‘missing’ Arg side chain found in other fungal species where (i) the Cdc3 subunit is an active GTPase and (ii) Cdc10-less hexamers natively co-exist with octamers. We propose that guanidinium reactivates a latent septin assembly pathway that was suppressed during fungal evolution in order to restrict assembly to octamers. Since homodimerization by a GTPase-active human septin also creates hexamers that exclude Cdc10-like central subunits, our new mechanistic insights likely apply throughout phylogeny.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Alzheimer's Association

Rare Genomics Institute

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

National Science Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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