Yeast gene KTI13 (alias DPH8) operates in the initiation step of diphthamide synthesis on elongation factor 2
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In: Microbial Cell Volume 10 / Issue No. 9 (2023-08-08) , S. 195 - 203; eissn:2311-2638
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In yeast, Elongator-dependent tRNA modifications are regulated by the Kti11•Kti13 dimer and hijacked for cell killing by zymocin, a tRNase ribotoxin. Kti11 (alias Dph3) also controls modification of elongation factor 2 (EF2) with diphthamide, the target for lethal ADP-ribosylation by diphtheria toxin (DT). Diphthamide formation on EF2 involves four biosynthetic steps encoded by the DPH1-DPH7 network and an ill-defined KTI13 function. On further examining the latter gene in yeast, we found that kti13Δ null-mutants maintain unmodified EF2 able to escape ADP-ribosylation by DT and to survive EF2 inhibition by sordarin, a diphthamide-dependent antifungal. Consistently, mass spectrometry shows kti13Δ cells are blocked in proper formation of amino-carboxyl-propyl-EF2, the first diphthamide pathway intermediate. Thus, apart from their common function in tRNA modification, both Kti11/Dph3 and Kti13 share roles in the initiation step of EF2 modification. We suggest an alias KTI13/DPH8 nomenclature indicating dual-functionality analogous to KTI11/DPH3.
@article{doi:10.17170/kobra-202312019147, author ={Arend, Meike and Ütkür, Koray and Hawer, Harmen and Mayer, Klaus and Ranjan, Namit and Adrian, Lorenz and Brinkmann, Ulrich and Schaffrath, Raffael}, title ={Yeast gene KTI13 (alias DPH8) operates in the initiation step of diphthamide synthesis on elongation factor 2}, keywords ={540 and 570 and 610 and Hefeartige Pilze and Toxin and Diphtherietoxin}, copyright ={http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/}, language ={en}, journal ={Microbial Cell}, year ={2023-08-08} }