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Gribaldo, Simonetta (Ed.)ABSTRACT Across the domains of life, actin homologs are integral components of many essential processes, such as DNA segregation, cell division, and cell shape determination. Archaeal genomes, like those of bacteria and eukaryotes, also encode actin homologs, but much less is known about these proteins’in vivodynamics and cellular functions. We identified and characterized the function and dynamics of Salactin, an actin homolog in the hypersaline archaeonHalobacterium salinarum. Live-cell time-lapse imaging revealed that Salactin forms dynamically unstable filaments that grow and shrink out of the cell poles. Like other dynamically unstable polymers, Salactin monomers are added at the growing filament end, and its ATP-bound critical concentration is substantially lower than the ADP-bound form. WhenH. salinarum’schromosomal copy number becomes limiting under low-phosphate growth conditions, cells lacking Salactin show perturbed DNA distributions. Taken together, we propose that Salactin is part of a previously unknown chromosomal segregation apparatus required during low-ploidy conditions. IMPORTANCEProtein filaments play important roles in many biological processes. We discovered an actin homolog in halophilic archaea, which we call Salactin. Just like the filaments that segregate DNA in eukaryotes, Salactin grows out of the cell poles towards the middle, and then quickly depolymerizes, a behavior known as dynamic instability. Furthermore, we see that Salactin affects the distribution of DNA in daughter cells when cells are grown in low-phosphate media, suggesting Salactin filaments might be involved in segregating DNA when the cell has only a few copies of the chromosome.more » « less
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Schulze, Stefan; Pfeiffer, Friedhelm; Garcia, Benjamin A.; Pohlschroder, Mechthild (, PLOS Biology)Gribaldo, Simonetta (Ed.)Glycosylation is one of the most complex posttranslational protein modifications. Its importance has been established not only for eukaryotes but also for a variety of prokaryotic cellular processes, such as biofilm formation, motility, and mating. However, comprehensive glycoproteomic analyses are largely missing in prokaryotes. Here, we extend the phenotypic characterization of N -glycosylation pathway mutants in Haloferax volcanii and provide a detailed glycoproteome for this model archaeon through the mass spectrometric analysis of intact glycopeptides. Using in-depth glycoproteomic datasets generated for the wild-type (WT) and mutant strains as well as a reanalysis of datasets within the Archaeal Proteome Project (ArcPP), we identify the largest archaeal glycoproteome described so far. We further show that different N -glycosylation pathways can modify the same glycosites under the same culture conditions. The extent and complexity of the Hfx . volcanii N -glycoproteome revealed here provide new insights into the roles of N -glycosylation in archaeal cell biology.more » « less
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