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1.
Regeneration of mirror symmetrical limbs in the axolotl   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
J M Slack  S Savage 《Cell》1978,14(1):1-8
Measurements of tubulin exchange into and from bovine brain microtubules at steady state in vitro were made with 3H-GTP as a marker for tubulin addition to or loss from microtubules. Tubulin has an exchangeable GTP binding site that becomes nonexchangeable in the microtubule. We found that tubulin addition to and loss from microtubules under steady state conditions occurred at equivalent rates, that loss and gain were linear, and that exchange rates (percentage of total tubulin in microtubules lost or gained per hour) were dependent upon microtubule length. Furthermore, we found that podophyllotoxin blocked steady state assembly, but did not alter the rate of steady state tubulin loss. When the assembling microtubule end was pulsed with 3H-GTP at steady state, the label was almost completely retained during a subsequent chase. We conclude that the microtubule assembly-disassembly "equilibrium" is a steady state summation of two different reactions which occur at opposite ends of the microtubule, and that assembly and disassembly occur predominantly and perhaps exclusively at the opposite ends under steady state conditions in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
M A Jordan  L Wilson 《Biochemistry》1990,29(11):2730-2739
We have investigated the effects of vinblastine at micromolar concentrations and below on the dynamics of tubulin exchange at the ends of microtubule-associated-protein-rich bovine brain microtubules. The predominant behavior of these microtubules at polymer-mass steady state under the conditions examined was tubulin flux, i.e., net addition of tubulin at one end of each microtubule, operationally defined as the assembly or A end, and balanced net loss at the opposite (disassembly or D) end. No dynamic instability behavior could be detected by video-enhanced dark-field microscopy. Addition of vinblastine to the microtubules at polymer-mass steady state resulted in an initial concentration-dependent depolymerization predominantly at the A ends, until a new steady-state plateau at an elevated critical concentration was established. Microtubules ultimately attained the same stable polymer-mass plateau when vinblastine was added prior to initiation of polymerization as when the drug was added to already polymerized microtubules. Vinblastine inhibited tubulin exchange at the ends of the microtubules at polymer-mass steady state, as determined by using microtubules differentially radiolabeled at their opposite ends. Inhibition of tubulin exchange occurred at concentrations of vinblastine that had very little effect on polymer mass. Both the initial burst of incorporation that occurs in control microtubule suspensions following a pulse of labeled GTP and the relatively slower linear incorporation of label that follows the initial burst were inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner by vinblastine. Both processes were inhibited to the same extent at all vinblastine concentrations examined. If the initial burst of label incorporation represents a low degree of dynamic instability (very short excursions of growth and shortening of the microtubules at one or both ends), then vinblastine inhibits both dynamic instability and flux to similar extents. The ability of vinblastine to inhibit tubulin exchange at microtubule ends in the micromolar concentration range appeared to be mediated by the reversible binding of vinblastine to tubulin binding sites exposed at the polymer ends. Determination by dilution analysis of the effects of vinblastine on the apparent dissociation rate constants for tubulin loss at opposite microtubule ends indicated that a principal effect of vinblastine is to decrease the dissociation rate constant at A ends (i.e., it produces a kinetic cap at A ends), whereas it has no effect on the D-end dissociation rate constant.  相似文献   

3.
Different models have been proposed that link the tubulin heterodimer nucleotide content and the role of GTP hydrolysis with microtubule assembly and dynamics. Here we compare the thermodynamics of microtubule assembly as a function of nucleotide content by van't Hoff analysis. The thermodynamic parameters of tubulin assembly in 30-100 mM piperazine-N,N'-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid), 1 mM MgSO4, 2 mM EGTA, pH 6.9, in the presence of a weakly hydrolyzable analog, GMPCPP, the dinucleotide analog GMPCP plus 2 M glycerol, and GTP plus 2 M glycerol were obtained together with data for taxol-GTP/GDP tubulin assembly (GMPCPP and GMPCP are the GTP and GDP nucleotide analogs where the alpha beta oxygen has been replaced by a methylene, -CH2-). All of the processes studied are characterized by a positive enthalpy, a positive entropy, and a large, negative heat capacity change. GMPCP-induced assembly has the largest negative heat capacity change and GMPCPP has the second largest, whereas GTP/2 M glycerol- and taxol-induced assembly have more positive values, respectively. A large, negative heat capacity is most consistent with the burial of water-accessible hydrophobic surface area, which gives rise to the release of bound water. The heat capacity changes observed with GTP/2 M glycerol-induced and with taxol-induced assembly are very similar, -790 +/- 190 cal/mol/k, and correspond to the burial of 3330 +/- 820 A2 of nonpolar surface area. This value is shown to be very similar to an estimate of the buried nonpolar surface in a reconstructed microtubule lattice. Polymerization data from GMPCP- and GMPCPP-induced assembly are consistent with buried nonpolar surface areas that are 3 and 6 times larger. A linear enthalpy-entropy and enthalpy-free energy plot for tubulin polymerization reactions verifies that enthalpy-entropy compensation for this system is based upon true biochemical correlation, most likely corresponding to a dominant hydrophobic effect. Entropy analysis suggests that assembly with GTP/2 M glycerol and with taxol is consistent with conformational rearrangements in 3-6% of the total amino acids in the heterodimer. In addition, taxol binding contributes to the thermodynamics of the overall process by reducing the delta H degree and delta S degree for microtubule assembly. In the presence of GMPCPP or GMPCP, tubulin subunits associate with extensive conformational rearrangement, corresponding to 10% and 26% of the total amino acids in the heterodimer, respectively, which gives rise to a large loss of configurational entropy. An alternative, and probably preferable, interpretation of these data is that, especially with GMPCP-tubulin, additional isomerization or protonation events are induced by the presence of the methylene moiety and linked to microtubule assembly. Structural analysis shows that GTP hydrolysis is not required for sheet closure into a microtubule cylinder, but only increases the probability of this event occurring. Sheet extensions and sheet polymers appear to have a similar average length under various conditions, suggesting that the minimum cooperative unit for closure of sheets into a microtubule cylinder is approximately 400 nm long. Because of their low level of occurrence, sheets are not expected to significantly affect the thermodynamics of assembly.  相似文献   

4.
R H Himes  H W Detrich 《Biochemistry》1989,28(12):5089-5095
The tubulins of Antarctic fishes, purified from brain tissue and depleted of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), polymerized efficiently in vitro to yield microtubules at near-physiological and supraphysiological temperatures (5, 10, and 20 degrees C). The dynamics of the microtubules at these temperatures were examined through the use of labeled guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP) as a marker for the incorporation, retention, and loss of tubulin dimers. Following attainment of a steady state in microtubule mass at 20 degrees C, the rate of incorporation of [3H]GTP (i.e., tubulin dimers) during pulses of constant duration decreased asymptotically toward a constant, nonzero value as the interval prior to label addition to the microtubule solution increased. Concomitant with the decreasing rate of label incorporation, the average length of the microtubules increased, and the number concentration of microtubules decreased. Thus, redistribution of microtubule lengths (probably via dynamic instability and/or microtubule annealing) appears to be responsible for the time-dependent decrease in the rate of tubulin uptake. When the microtubules had attained both a steady state in mass and a constant length distribution, linear incorporation of labeled tubulin dimers over time occurred at rates of 1.45 s-1 at 5 degrees C, 0.48 s-1 at 10 degrees C, and 0.18 s-1 at 20 degrees C. Thus, the microtubules displayed greater rates of subunit flux, or treadmilling, at lower, near-physiological temperatures. At each temperature, most of the incorporated label was retained by the microtubules during a subsequent chase with excess unlabeled GTP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
We have investigated the effects of taxol on steady-state tubulin flux and on the apparent molecular rate constants for tubulin addition and loss at the two ends of bovine brain microtubules in vitro. These microtubules, which consist of a mixture of 70% tubulin and 30% microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), undergo a net addition of tubulin at one end of each microtubule (A end) and a precisely balanced net loss of tubulin at the opposite end (D end) at steady state in vitro. They do not exhibit to a detectable extent the "dynamic instability" behavior described recently for MAP-free microtubules, which would be evident as an increase in the mean microtubule length and a decrease in the number of microtubules in the suspensions [Mitchison, T., & Kirschner, M. (1984) Nature (London) 312, 237-242]. We used a double-label procedure in which microtubules were labeled with tritium and carbon-14 at A ends and carbon-14 at D ends to distinguish the two ends, combined with a microtubule collection procedure that permitted rapid and accurate analysis of retention of the two labels in the microtubules. We found that taxol slowed the flux of tubulin in a concentration-dependent manner, with 50% inhibition occurring between 5 and 7 microM drug. The effects of taxol on the apparent molecular rate constants for tubulin addition and loss at the two microtubule ends were determined by dilution analysis at an intermediate taxol concentration. The results indicated that taxol decreased the magnitudes of the dissociation rate constants at the two ends to similar extents, while exerting little effect on the association rate constants.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Microtubules are dynamic polymers with central roles in the mitotic checkpoint, mitotic spindle assembly, and chromosome segregation. Agents that block mitotic progression and cell proliferation by interfering with microtubule dynamics (microtubule-targeted tubulin-polymerizing agents (MTPAs)) are powerful antitumor agents. Effects of MTPAs (e.g. paclitaxel) on microtubule dynamics have not yet been directly demonstrated in intact animals, however. Here we describe a method that measures microtubule dynamics as an exchange of tubulin dimers into microtubules in vivo. The incorporation of deuterium ((2)H(2)) from heavy water ((2)H(2)O) into tubulin dimers and polymers is measured by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. In cultured human lung and breast cancer cell lines, or in tumors implanted into nude mice, tubulin dimers and polymerized microtubules exhibited nearly identical label incorporation rates, reflecting their rapid exchange. Administration of paclitaxel during 24 h of (2)H(2)O labeling in vivo reduced (2)H labeling in polymers while increasing (2)H in dimers, indicating diminished flux of dimers into polymers (i.e. inhibition of microtubule dynamic equilibrium). In vivo inhibition of microtubule dynamics was dose-dependent and correlated with inhibition of DNA replication, a stable isotopic measure of tumor cell growth. In contrast, microtubule polymers from sciatic nerve of untreated mice were not in dynamic equilibrium with tubulin dimers, and paclitaxel increased label incorporation into polymers. Our results directly demonstrate altered microtubule dynamics as an important action of MTPAs in vivo. This sensitive and quantitative in vivo assay of microtubule dynamics may prove useful for pre-clinical and clinical development of the next generation of MTPAs as anticancer drugs.  相似文献   

7.
The kinetics of microtubule polymerization to steady-state and the ability of tubulin subunits to exchange with polymer at steady-state were examined to determine the applicability of the head-to-tail polymerization mechanism (Wegner, 1976) to microtubule assembly in vitro. Under conditions where self-nucleation was a rare event, tubulin was induced to polymerize by the addition of short microtubule fragments, and the kinetics of elongation were analyzed as a pseudofirst-order reaction. At steady-state, a trace amount of [3H]tubulin, prepared by labeling in vivo of chick brain protein, was added to polymerized microtubules and the kinetics of label uptake into polymer were monitored by a rapid centrifugal assay. The isotope exchange kinetics were analyzed according to a theoretical model previously applied to actin polymerization (Wegner, 1976) and extended for the case of microtubule polymerization. The rate of head-to-tail polymerization, expressed as the steady-state subunit flux, was 27·6 ± 7·6 per second at 37 °C. The head-to-tail parameter s, a measure of the efficiency of subunit flux, was 0·26 ± 0·07, indicating that four association and four dissociation events resulted in the flux of one subunit through the polymer at steady-state.The role of GTP in this mechanism of microtubule polymerization was examined by replacement of the nucleotide occupying the exchangeable binding site of tubulin with the non-hydrolyzable GTP analog guanosine 5′-(β,γ-methylene)triphosphate. It was found that the rate of steady-state flux was reduced by two orders of magnitude compared to tubulin polymerized with GTP. The head-to-tail parameter approached its limiting value of zero, indicating greatly reduced efficiency of subunit flux through the polymer in the presence of this analog.In summary, this study demonstrates that microtubules exhibit significant headto-tail polymerization in the presence of GTP and, in keeping with theoretical considerations, provides evidence that nucleotide hydrolysis is required for subunit flux through the polymer.  相似文献   

8.
We propose a stochastic model that accounts for the growth, catastrophe and rescue processes of steady-state microtubules assembled from MAP-free tubulin in the possible presence of a microtubule-associated drug. As an example of the latter, we both experimentally and theoretically study the perturbation of microtubule dynamic instability by S-methyl-D-DM1, a synthetic derivative of the microtubule-targeted agent maytansine and a potential anticancer agent. Our model predicts that among the drugs that act locally at the microtubule tip, primary inhibition of the loss of GDP tubulin results in stronger damping of microtubule dynamics than inhibition of GTP tubulin addition. On the other hand, drugs whose action occurs in the interior of the microtubule need to be present in much higher concentrations to have visible effects.  相似文献   

9.
Trypanosome tubulin was purified to near homogeneity by chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex, Amicon filtration and assembly-disassembly in vitro. Polymerization of the tubulin in vitro yielded long, structurally normal, microtubules and some sheet structures on addition of GTP and incubation at 37 degrees C, in either the presence or the absence of Mg2+. Tubulin assembly was disrupted by glycerol and a selection of microtubule-reactive drugs. Immunological analysis of the purified tubulin revealed tyrosinated and acetylated alpha-tubulin, in addition to defining the migration characteristics of the alpha- and beta-tubulin on one-dimensional SDS/polyacrylamide gels. This is the first isolation of trypanosome tubulin with the ability to form structurally normal microtubules independent of the addition of taxol or nucleating microtubule fragments. The development of the purification procedure thus provides an important step for subsequent study of microtubule-associated protein-tubulin and plasma-membrane-microtubule cytoskeleton interactions of trypanosomes, and increases the potential for development of tubulin-based anti-trypanosome drugs.  相似文献   

10.
Even in the presence of colchicine or Taxol(R), sea urchin embryonic cilia undergo substantial steady-state turnover, with a rate of tubulin incorporation approaching half that seen in full regeneration [Stephens: Mol Biol Cell 8:2187-2198, 1997]. Preliminary experiments suggest that tubulin incorporates differentially into the most stable portion of the outer doublet, the junctional protofilaments [Stephens: Cell Struct Funct 24:413-418, 1999]. To explore this possibility further, embryos of the sea urchin Tripneustes gratilla, a ciliary length inducible system [Stephens: J Exp Zool 269:106-115, 1994a], were pulse labeled with (3)H leucine during steady-state turnover or induced elongation, followed by regeneration in the presence of unlabeled leucine. Cilia were isolated by hypertonic shock and fractionated into detergent-soluble membrane plus matrix, thermally-solubilized microtubule walls, and insoluble 9-fold symmetric remnants of A-B junctional protofilaments plus associated architectural elements. The fractions were resolved by SDS-PAGE and the specific activity of alpha-tubulin was determined. In cilia undergoing turnover or elongation during an isotope pulse, the specific activity of tubulin in the junctional region approximated that of precursor membrane plus matrix tubulin but surpassed that of the tubule wall by a factor of approximately 1.5. In cilia regenerated during an isotope chase, the specific activity of junctional tubulin exceeded that of both the membrane plus matrix and the tubule wall by a similar factor. These data indicate that tubulin is preferentially incorporated into junctional protofilaments during steady-state turnover, induced elongation and regeneration. A model for directional incorporation based on surface lattice discontinuities in the outer doublet is proposed.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Depolymerization kinetics of microtubules assembled to steady-state by pod ophyllotoxin treatment show a dose-dependent effect of this mitotic poison on the net rate of microtubule disassembly. Pulse-chase experiments with microtubules at steady-state indicate that the depolymerization effect induced by superstoichiometric concentrations of podophyllotoxin relative to tubulin is polar and time-dependent, i.e. the rate of tubulin loss decreases along with the time of treatment in the presence of the drug. Under these conditions the rate of microtubule disassembly is much faster than one could expect from a unique effect of drug-tubulin complex on the microtubule assembly end. Podophyllotoxin-tubulin complex is not able to induce active depolymerization of microtubules, while free podophyllotoxin is. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that this drug acts on the microtubule assembly-disassembly process by two different mechanisms: 1) as a free drug, it actively promotes polar depolymerization of microtubules, and 2) as a drug-tubulin complex, it retards the addition of subunits into the microtubule ends.  相似文献   

12.
How microtubules get fluorescent speckles.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The dynamics of microtubules in living cells can be seen by fluorescence microscopy when fluorescently labeled tubulin is microinjected into cells, mixing with the cellular tubulin pool and incorporating into microtubules. The subsequent fluorescence distribution along microtubules can appear "speckled" in high-resolution images obtained with a cooled CCD camera (Waterman-Storer and Salmon, 1997. J. Cell Biol. 139:417-434). In this paper we investigate the origins of these fluorescent speckles. In vivo microtubules exhibited a random pattern of speckles for different microtubules and different regions of an individual microtubule. The speckle pattern changed only after microtubule shortening and regrowth. Microtubules assembled from mixtures of labeled and unlabeled pure tubulin in vitro also exhibited fluorescent speckles, demonstrating that cellular factors or organelles do not contribute to the speckle pattern. Speckle contrast (measured as the standard deviation of fluorescence intensity along the microtubule divided by the mean fluorescence intensity) decreased as the fraction of labeled tubulin increased, and it was not altered by the binding of purified brain microtubule-associated proteins. Computer simulation of microtubule assembly with labeled and unlabeled tubulin showed that the speckle patterns can be explained solely by the stochastic nature of tubulin dimer association with a growing end. Speckle patterns can provide fiduciary marks in the microtubule lattice for motility studies or can be used to determine the fraction of labeled tubulin microinjected into living cells.  相似文献   

13.
The microtubule cytoskeleton plays an important role in eukaryotic cells, e. g., in cell movement or morphogenesis. Microtubules, formed by assembly of tubulin dimers, are dynamic polymers changing randomly between periods of growing and shortening, a property known as dynamic instability. Another process characterizing the dynamic behaviour is the so-called treadmilling due to different binding constants of tubulin at both microtubule ends. In this study, we used tetramethylrhodamine (TMR)-labeled tubulin added to microtubule suspensions to determine the net exchange rate (NER) of tubulin dimers by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) as a measure for microtubule dynamics. This approach, which seems to be suitable as a screening system to detect compounds influencing the NER of tubulin dimers into microtubules at steady-state, showed that taxol, nocodazole, colchicine, and vinblastine affect microtubule dynamics at concentrations as low as 10(-9)-10(-10) M.  相似文献   

14.
Previous pulse-chase labeling studies have shown that structural proteins incorporate into fully assembled sea urchin embryonic cilia at rates approaching those of full regeneration. When all background ciliogenesis was suppressed by taxol, the turnover of most proteins, including tubulin, continued. The present study utilized chemical dissection to explore the route of tubulin incorporation in the presence of taxol and also in steady-state cilia from prism stage embryos. Surprisingly, in cilia from untreated embryos, the most heavily labeled tubulin was found in the most stable portion of the doublet microtubles, the junctional protofilaments. With taxol, this preferential incorporation was suppressed, although control-level turnover still took place in the remainder of the doublet. This paradoxical result was confirmed by pulse-chase labeling and immediately isolating steady-state cilia, then isolating two additional crops of cilia regenerated, respectively, from pools of high and then decreased label. In each case, the level of label occurring in the tubulin from the junctional protofilaments, compared with that from the remainder of the doublet, correlated with the level of pool label from which it must exchange or assemble. These data indicate that ciliary outer doublet microtubules are dynamic structures and that the junctional region is not inert. Plausible mechanisms of incorporation and turnover of tubulin in fully-assembled, fully-motile cilia can now be assessed with regared to recent discoveries, particularly intraflagellar transport, distal tip incorporation, and treadmilling.  相似文献   

15.
XMAP215 is a processive microtubule polymerase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Fast growth of microtubules is essential for rapid assembly of the microtubule cytoskeleton during cell proliferation and differentiation. XMAP215 belongs to a conserved family of proteins that promote microtubule growth. To determine how XMAP215 accelerates growth, we developed a single-molecule assay to visualize directly XMAP215-GFP interacting with dynamic microtubules. XMAP215 binds free tubulin in a 1:1 complex that interacts with the microtubule lattice and targets the ends by a diffusion-facilitated mechanism. XMAP215 persists at the plus end for many rounds of tubulin subunit addition in a form of "tip tracking." These results show that XMAP215 is a processive polymerase that directly catalyzes the addition of up to 25 tubulin dimers to the growing plus end. Under some circumstances XMAP215 can also catalyze the reverse reaction, namely microtubule shrinkage. The similarities between XMAP215 and formins, actin polymerases, suggest that processive tip tracking is a common mechanism for stimulating the growth of cytoskeletal polymers.  相似文献   

16.
To study tubulin polymerization and microtubule sliding during spindle elongation in vitro, we developed a method of uncoupling the two processes. When isolated diatom spindles were incubated with biotinylated tubulin (biot-tb) without ATP, biot-tb was incorporated into two regions flanking the zone of microtubule overlap, but the spindles did not elongate. After biot-tb was removed, spindle elongation was initiated by addition of ATP. The incorporated biot-tb was found in the midzone between the original half-spindles. The extent and rate of elongation were increased by preincubation in biot-tb. Serial section reconstruction of spindles elongating in tubulin and ATP showed that the average length of half-spindle microtubules increased due to growth of microtubules from the ends of native microtubules. The characteristic packing pattern between antiparallel microtubules was retained even in the "new" overlap region. Our results suggest that the forces required for spindle elongation are generated by enzymes in the overlap zone that mediate the sliding apart of antiparallel microtubules, and that tubulin polymerization does not contribute to force generation. Changes in the extent of microtubule overlap during spindle elongation were affected by tubulin and ATP concentration in the incubation medium. Spindles continued to elongate even after the overlap zone was composed entirely of newly polymerized microtubules, suggesting that the enzyme responsible for microtubule translocation either is bound to a matrix in the spindle midzone, or else can move on one microtubule toward the spindle midzone and push another microtubule of opposite polarity toward the pole.  相似文献   

17.
D Saltarelli  D Pantaloni 《Biochemistry》1983,22(19):4607-4614
We have shown previously [Saltarelli, D., & Pantaloni, D. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2996-3006] that the tubulin-colchicine complex is able to polymerize in vitro into peculiar "curly" polymers, under the solution conditions permitting polymerization of unliganded tubulin into microtubules. Here it is further demonstrated that unliganded tubulin can be incorporated into these "curly" polymers. The partial critical concentration of tubulin-colchicine is decreased upon incorporation of unliganded tubulin into the copolymer. GTP hydrolysis occurs on unliganded tubulin upon incorporation in the copolymer. Tubulin-podophyllotoxin does not copolymerize with tubulin-colchicine to form a large polymer but interacts with it, preventing tubulin-colchicine polymerization. The data have been analyzed within a model of random copolymerization of unliganded tubulin and tubulin-colchicine into "curly" polymers. A corollary is that unliganded tubulin is virtually able to self-assemble into curly polymers with a critical concentration 10-fold higher than the critical concentration found for microtubule assembly. Consequently, these peculiar tubulin homopolymers cannot be observed except as transients at high concentrations, or when microtubule assembly is inhibited. Kinetic measurements of the T-TC copolymerization process and associated GTP hydrolysis at different T/TC ratios provide supplementary information about some privileged interactions between tubulin and tubulin-colchicine molecules. A comprehensive phase diagram of the various possible polymers formed in the presence of tubulin and tubulin-colchicine is presented.  相似文献   

18.
Microtubule dynamics in fish melanophores   总被引:8,自引:4,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(6):1455-1464
We have studied the dynamics of microtubules in black tetra (Gymnocorymbus ternetzi) melanophores to test the possible correlation of microtubule stability and intracellular particle transport. X- rhodamine-or caged fluorescein-conjugated tubulin were microinjected and visualized by fluorescence digital imaging using a cooled charge coupled device and videomicroscopy. Microtubule dynamics were evaluated by determining the time course of tubulin incorporation after pulse injection, by time lapse observation, and by quantitation of fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching and photoactivation. The time course experiments showed that the kinetics of incorporation of labeled tubulin into microtubules were similar for cells with aggregated or dispersed pigment with most microtubules becoming fully labeled within 15-20 min after injection. Quantitation by fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching and photoactivation confirmed that microtubule turnover was rapid in both states, t1/2 = 3.5 +/- 1.5 and 6.1 +/- 3.0 min for cells with aggregated and dispersed pigment, respectively. In addition, immunostaining with antibodies specific to posttranslationally modified alpha-tubulin, which is usually enriched in stable microtubules, showed that microtubules composed exclusively of detyrosinated tubulin were absent and microtubules containing acetylated tubulin were sparse. We conclude that the microtubules of melanophores are very dynamic, that their dynamic properties do not depend critically on the state of pigment distribution, and that their stabilization is not a prerequisite for intracellular transport.  相似文献   

19.
The molecular mechanisms that allow elongation of the unstable microtubule lattice remain unclear. It is usually thought that the GDP-liganded tubulin lattice is capped by a small layer of GTP- or GDP-Pi-liganded molecules, the so called "GTP-cap". Here, we point-out that the elastic properties of the microtubule lattice cause a difference in stability between the elongating tubulin sheet and the completed microtubule wall. The implications of our observations for microtubule structure and dynamics are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The microtubule-associated protein TOGp, which belongs to a widely distributed protein family from yeasts to humans, is highly expressed in human tumors and brain tissue. From purified components we have determined the effect of TOGp on thermally induced tubulin association in vitro in the presence of 1 mm GTP and 3.4 m glycerol. Physicochemical parameters describing the mechanism of tubulin polymerization were deduced from the kinetic curves by application of the classical theoretical models of tubulin assembly. We have calculated from the polymerization time curves a range of parameters characteristic of nucleation, elongation, or steady state phase. In addition, the tubulin subunits turnover at microtubule ends was deduced from tubulin GTPase activity. For comparison, parallel experiments were conducted with colchicine and taxol, two drugs active on microtubules and with tau, a structural microtubule-associated protein from brain tissue. TOGp, which decreases the nucleus size and the tenth time of the reaction (the time required to produce 10% of the final amount of polymer), shortens the nucleation phase of microtubule assembly. In addition, TOGp favors microtubule formation by increasing the apparent first order rate constant of elongation. Moreover, TOGp increases the total amount of polymer by decreasing the tubulin critical concentration and by inhibiting depolymerization during the steady state of the reaction.  相似文献   

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