PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Drosophila CG17003/leaky (lky) is required for microtubule acetylation in early germ cells in Drosophila ovary.

  • Matthew Antel,
  • Taylor Simao,
  • Muhammed Burak Bener,
  • Mayu Inaba

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0276704
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 11
p. e0276704

Abstract

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Microtubule acetylation is found in populations of stable, long-lived microtubules, occurring on the conserved lysine 40 (K40) residue of α-tubulin by α-tubulin acetyltransferases (αTATs). α-tubulin K40 acetylation has been shown to stabilize microtubules via enhancing microtubule resilience against mechanical stress. Here we show that a previously uncharacterized αTAT, Drosophila CG17003/leaky (lky), is required for α-tubulin K40 acetylation in early germ cells in Drosophila ovary. We found that loss of lky resulted in a progressive egg chamber fusion phenotype accompanied with mislocalization of germline-specific Vasa protein in somatic follicle cells. The same phenotype was observed upon replacement of endogenous α-tubulin84B with non-acetylatable α-tubulin84BK40A, suggesting α-tubulin K40 acetylation is responsible for the phenotype. Chemical disturbance of microtubules by Colcemid treatment resulted in a mislocalization of Vasa in follicle cells within a short period of time (~30 min), suggesting that the observed mislocalization is likely caused by direct leakage of cellular contents between germline and follicle cells. Taken together, this study provides a new function of α-tubulin acetylation in maintaining the cellular identity possibly by preventing the leakage of tissue-specific gene products between juxtaposing distinct cell types.