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Old AIMs of the exocyst: Evidence for an ancestral association of exocyst subunits with autophagy-associated Atg8 proteins

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2013

Abstract

In a recent addendum, Oren Tzfadia and Gad Galili (PSB 2014; 9:e26732) showed that several Arabidopsis exocyst subunits possess consensus Atg8-interacting motifs (AIMs), which may mediate their interaction with the autophagy-associated Atg8 protein, providing thus a mechanistic base for participation of exocyst (sub)complexes in autophagy. However, the bioinformatically identified AIMs are short peptide motifs that may occur by chance.

We thus performed an exhaustive search in a large collection of plant exocyst-derived sequences from our previous bioinformatic study and found that AIMs are over-represented among exocyst subunits of all lineages examined, including moss and club moss, compared with a representative sample of the Arabidopsis proteome. This is consistent with the proposed exocyst AIMs being biologically meaningful and evolutionarily ancient.

Moreover, among the numerous EXO70 paralogs, the monocot-specific EXO70F clade appears to be exempt from the general AIM enrichment, suggesting a modification of the autophagy connection in a subset of exocyst variants.