Revisiting the Role of ß-Tubulin in Drosophila Development: β-tubulin60D is not an Essential Gene, and its Novel Pin 1 Allele has a Tissue-Specific Dominant-Negative Impact

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Abstract

Diversity in cytoskeleton organization and function may be achieved through alternative tubulin isotypes and by a variety of post-translational modifications. The Drosophila genome contains five different β-tubulin paralogs, which may play an isotype tissue-specific function in vivo. One of these genes, the β-tubulin60D gene, which is expressed in a tissue-specific manner, was found to be essential for fly viability and fertility. To further understand the role of the β-tubulin60D gene, we generated new β-tubulin60D null alleles (β-tubulin60DM) using the CRISPR/Cas9 system and found that the homozygous flies were viable and fertile. Moreover, using a combination of genetic complementation tests, rescue experiments, and cell biology analyses, we identified Pin1, an unknown dominant mutant with bristle developmental defects, as a dominant-negative allele of β-tubulin60D. We also found a missense mutation in the Pin1 mutant that results in an amino acid replacement from the highly conserved glutamate at position 75 to lysine (E75K). Analyzing the ß-tubulin structure suggests that this E75K alteration destabilizes the alpha-helix structure and may also alter the GTP-Mg2+ complex binding capabilities. Our results revisited the credence that β-tubulin60D is required for fly viability and revealed for the first time in Drosophila, a novel dominant-negative function of missense β-tubulin60D mutation in bristle morphogenesis.

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Krishnan, R. K., Halachmi, N., Baskar, R., Bakhrat, A., Zarivach, R., Salzberg, A., & Abdu, U. (2022). Revisiting the Role of ß-Tubulin in Drosophila Development: β-tubulin60D is not an Essential Gene, and its Novel Pin 1 Allele has a Tissue-Specific Dominant-Negative Impact. Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, 9. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2021.787976

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