Published November 18, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article

Biological effects of the loss of homochirality in a multicellular organism

Description

Abstract Homochirality is a fundamental feature of all known forms of life, maintaining biomolecules (amino-acids, proteins, sugars, nucleic acids) in one specific chiral form. While this condition is central to biology, the mechanisms by which the adverse accumulation of non- l- α-amino-acids in proteins lead to pathophysiological consequences remain poorly understood. To address how heterochirality build-up impacts organism's health, we use chiral-selective in vivo assays to detect protein-bound non -l -α-amino acids (focusing on aspartate) and assess their functional significance in Drosophila . We find that altering the in vivo chiral balance creates a 'heterochirality syndrome' with impaired caspase activity, increased tumour formation, and premature death. Our work shows that preservation of homochirality is a key component of protein function that is essential to maintain homeostasis across the cell, tissue and organ level.

Abstract

International audience

Additional details

Created:
December 3, 2022
Modified:
November 29, 2023