首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
A protein which binds to both tubulin and tubulin polymer was isolated from porcine brains. This protein has a molecular weight of 35,000 on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (designated as 35 K protein). The 35 K protein was purified through several steps of purification including ammonium sulfate fractionation, Sephadex G-100 gel filtration column chromatography, microtubule protein-agarose gel affinity column chromatography and phosphocellulose column chromatography. The 35 K protein caused pronounced enhancement of the turbidity increase produced by tubulin polymerization in the presence of DMSO, but did not have the ability to initiate polymerization of pure tubulin in the absence of DMSO. It was demonstrated that 35 K protein co-sediments with tubulin polymer in a concentration-dependent manner. Electron microscopic observation revealed the formation of bundles of tubulin polymer. Since the effect of 35 K protein was coupled with tubulin polymerization, 35 K protein did not cause the turbidity increase under conditions where tubulin polymerization was inhibited by Ca2+ or colchicine. The 35 K protein adsorbed on tubulin-Sepharose 4B was eluted by the addition of 2 mM ATP. ATP was shown to inhibit the interaction of 35 K protein with tubulin dimer or polymer. The 35 K protein was finally identified as glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase from properties such as mobility on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, cleavage pattern on limited proteolysis, ability to bind to tubulin, and so on.  相似文献   

2.
A protein which binds to tubulin polymer was isolated from a human colonic tumor cell line. This protein has a molecular mass of 35 kDa, as determined by polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis. The protein was purified by affinity chromatography on taxol-stabilized microtubules, and it did not cross-react with anti-MAP2 or anti-tau antibodies. This protein was identified as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase by its enzyme activity and immunoblotting experiments. The purified protein caused a pronounced enhancement in the turbidity increase produced by in vitro tubulin polymerization, and electron microscopic observations revealed the presence of bundles of microtubules.  相似文献   

3.
H W Detrich  L Wilson 《Biochemistry》1983,22(10):2453-2462
Tubulin was purified from unfertilized eggs of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus by chromatography of an egg supernatant fraction on DEAE-Sephacel or DEAE-cellulose followed by cycles of temperature-dependent microtubule assembly and disassembly in vitro. After two assembly cycles, the microtubule protein consisted of the alpha- and beta-tubulins (greater than 98% of the protein) and trace quantities of seven proteins with molecular weights less than 55 000; no associated proteins with molecular weights greater than tubulin were observed. When analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on urea-polyacrylamide gradient gels, the alpha- and beta-tubulins did not precisely comigrate with their counterparts from bovine brain. Two-dimensional electrophoresis revealed that urchin egg tubulin contained two major alpha-tubulins and a single major beta species. No oligomeric structures were observed in tubulin preparations maintained at 0 degrees C. Purified egg tubulin assembled efficiently into microtubules when warmed to 37 degrees C in a glycerol-free polymerization buffer containing guanosine 5'-triphosphate. The critical concentration for assembly of once- or twice-cycled egg tubulin was 0.12-0.15 mg/mL. Morphologically normal microtubules were observed by electron microscopy, and these microtubules were depolymerized by exposure to low temperature or to podophyllotoxin. Chromatography of a twice-cycled egg tubulin preparation on phosphocellulose did not alter its protein composition and did not affect its subsequent assembly into microtubules. At concentrations above 0.5-0.6 mg/mL, a concentration-dependent "overshoot" in turbidity was observed during the assembly reaction. These results suggest that egg tubulin assembles into microtubules in the absence of the ring-shaped oligomers and microtubule-associated proteins that characterize microtubule protein from vertebrate brain.  相似文献   

4.
A factor (33K protein) that modulates tubulin polymerization in vitro has been purified to homogeneity from porcine brain by ammonium sulfate fractionation and Whatman DE52, Toyo-pearl HW65C and Bio-Gel A 0.5 m column chromatographies. The purified fraction was free of nucleic acids and sugars. The activity of the purified 33K protein is pronase E sensitive but apparently heat- and trypsin-resistant though it undergoes tryptic digestion. The 33K protein inhibits polymerization of brain microtubule proteins in a dose-dependent manner and partially depolymerizes preformed microtubules. It also inhibits polymerization of purified starfish tubulin and microtubule elongation involving fragellar outer doublet microtubules and purified porcine brain tubulin. This suggests that the target of the 33K protein is tubulin rather than microtubule-associated proteins. The 33K protein causes incomplete depolymerization of microtubules and a new steady state is quickly attained which is apparently independent of microtubule mass concentration. Divalent cations such as calcium and magnesium do not modulate the inhibitory activity of the 33K protein.  相似文献   

5.
Changes in the hydrodynamic properties of microtubules induced by taxol   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microtubule assembly was followed and monitored by (1) the turbidity at 350 nm, (2) the weight of the pelleted microtubules, (3) linear dichroism, LD tau, of the turbidity upon flow orientation, (4) the specific viscosity, eta spec, and (5) electron microscopy. These five methods showed the same features for normal microtubule assembly, but were different in the presence of taxol, a drug which binds to tubulin. The The apparent steady state of microtubule assembly in the presence of taxol as found by turbidity or the weight of pelleted polymer did not represent a stable state, as both LD tau and eta spec continued to change for a much longer time. Microtubules assembled in the presence of taxol from microtubule proteins as well as from purified tubulin were difficult to orient, as high flow gradients were needed and the maximal LD tau value represented only 20% of the LD tau for normal microtubules. In contrast to the slow relaxation of normal microtubules, rapid relaxation to random orientation was found in the presence of taxol. Low orientability was also indicated by electron micrographs, in which pelleted microtubules were seen to be randomly oriented in the presence of taxol. Taxol induced a very high eta spec, 4-times the steady-state value in the initial phase of assembly, which slowly declined again to a steady state, an effect which was also found for assembly of purified tubulin assembled in the absence of the microtubule-associated proteins. The presence of taxol did not change the relative amount and composition of the microtubule-associated proteins in the assembled microtubules. The results therefore suggest that taxol alters the hydrodynamic properties of the microtubules due to its interaction with tubulin and that this alteration is not an effect of the microtubule-associated proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Bovine brain microtubule protein, containing both tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins, undergoes ADP-ribosylation in the presence of [14C]NAD+ and a turkey erythrocyte mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase in vitro. The modification reaction could be demonstrated in crude brain tissue extracts where selective ADP-ribosylation of both the alpha and beta chains of tubulin and of the high molecular weight microtubule-associated protein MAP-2 occurred. In experiments with purified microtubule protein, tubulin dimer, the high molecular weight microtubule-associated protein MAP-2, and another high molecular weight mirotubule-associated protein which may be a MAP-1 species were heavily labeled. Tubulin and MAP-2 incorporated [14C]ADP-ribose to an average extent of approximately 2.4 and 30 mol of ADP-ribose/mol of protein, respectively. Assembly of microtubule protein into microtubules in vitro was inhibited by ADP-ribosylation, and incubation of assembled steady-state microtubules with ADP-ribosyltransferase and NAD+ resulted in rapid depolymerization of the microtubules. Thus, the eukaryotic enzyme can ADP-ribosylate tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins to much greater extents than previously observed with cholera and pertussis toxins, and the modification can significantly modulate microtubule assembly and disassembly.  相似文献   

7.
The involvement of high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins (HMW-MAPs) in the process of taxol-induced microtubule bundling has been studied using immunofluorescence and electron microscopy. Immunofluorescence microscopy shows that HMW-MAPs are released from microtubules in granulosa cells which have been extracted in a Triton X-100 microtubule-stabilizing buffer (T-MTSB), unless the cells are pretreated with taxol. 1.0 microM taxol treatment for 48 h results in microtubule bundle formation and the retention of HMW-MAPs in these cells upon extraction with T-MTSB. Electron microscopy demonstrates that microtubules in control cytoskeletons are devoid of surface structures whereas the microtubules in taxol-treated cytoskeletons are decorated by globular particles of a mean diameter of 19.5 nm. The assembly of 3 X cycled whole microtubule protein (tubulin plus associated proteins) in vitro in the presence of 1.0 microM taxol, results in the formation of closely packed microtubules decorated with irregularly spaced globular particles, similar in size to those observed in cytoskeletons of taxol-treated granulosa cells. Microtubules assembled in vitro in the absence of taxol display prominent filamentous extensions from the microtubule surface and center-to-center spacings greater than that observed for microtubules assembled in the presence of taxol. Brain microtubule protein was purified into 6 s and HMW-MAP-enriched fractions, and the effects of taxol on the assembly and morphology of these fractions, separately or in combination, were examined. Microtubules assembled from 6 s tubulin alone or 6 s tubulin plus taxol (without HMW-MAPs) were short, free structures whereas those formed in the presence of taxol from 6 s tubulin and a HMW-MAP-enriched fraction were extensively crosslinked into aggregates. These data suggest that taxol induces microtubule bundling by stabilizing the association of HMW-MAPs with the microtubule surface which promotes lateral aggregation.  相似文献   

8.
Interactions of both purified tubulin and microtubule protein (tubulin plus associated proteins) with two commonly used sulfonate buffers were examined. 1,4-Piperazineethanesulfonate (Pipes) and 4-morpholineethanesulfonate (Mes) at high concentrations induce the polymerization of purified tubulin in reactions requiring only buffer, tubulin and GTP. While both reactions were temperature-dependent, cold-reversible and inhibited by GDP, colchicine or Ca2+, there were significant differences between them. Substantially lower tubulin and buffer concentrations were required for Pipes-induced polymerization; and turbidity was much more intense in the Pipes-induced than in the Mes-induced reaction at the same protein concentration. Electron microscopy demonstrated that for the most part typical smooth-walled microtubules were formed in Mes, while aberrant forms were the predominant structures formed in Pipes. When the polymerization of microtubule protein was examined as a function of buffer concentration, biphasic patterns were observed with both Pipes and Mes: polymerization occurred at both low and high, but not intermediate, buffer concentrations. The turbidity observed at high concentrations of Pipes greatly exceeded that at low concentrations. With Mes, equivalent turbidity developed at both high and low buffer concentrations. Although associated proteins copolymerized with tubulin at low buffer concentrations, they were excluded from the polymerized material at high buffer concentrations. Pipes and Mes were compared to sodium phosphate, Tris/HCl and imidazole/HCl buffers at 0.1 M in several polymerization systems using both purified tubulin and microtubule protein. The sulfonate buffers were invariably associated with more vigorous reactions than the other buffers.  相似文献   

9.
Tubulin from the brine shrimp Artemia readily assembles in vitro in the absence of microtubule-associated proteins under conditions which do not permit assembly of tubulin from brain. Heated microtubule-associated protein preparations from bovine brain do, however, interact with Artemia tubulin, resulting in stimulation of tubulin assembly and formation of morphologically normal cold-sensitive microtubules. Addition of vinblastine to mixtures containing microtubules assembled in the presence of neural microtubule-associated proteins caused a drop and then a rise in turbidity of the solution. The turbidity changes were accompanied by the appearance of coils, presumably derived from the microtubules which disappeared upon addition of vinblastine. Coils also resulted when microtubule-associated proteins and vinblastine were added to tubulin before polymerization was initiated. Vinblastine prevented normal assembly and caused disruption of Artemia microtubules polymerized in the absence of microtubule-associated proteins. Under these conditions clumped or compact coils, different in appearance from those formed in the presence of the microtubule-associated proteins, were observed. The data confirm that tubulin from Artemia, an organism that is phylogenetically far removed from mammals, has retained binding sites for vinblastine and microtubule-associated proteins and that the interrelationship of these sites has been at least partially preserved. The incomplete depolymerization of Artemia microtubules in response to vinblastine when microtubule-associated proteins are absent suggests that the longitudinal tubulin-tubulin interactions involved in microtubule formation are more stable for Artemia than for neural tubulin.  相似文献   

10.
Addition of increasing amounts of zinc to a cold microtubule protein solution results in the disappearance of 30 S oligomer found in the absence of that cation and in the appearance of new tubulin oligomers, 90 S and 23 S. When a microtubule protein solution is warmed in the presence of zinc, tubulin-sheets are assembled. We have tested the influence of microtubule associated proteins and the zinc:tubulin ratio on the polymerization process. Depletion of microtubule associated proteins results in wider and longer tubulin-sheets than those polymerized in the presence of microtubule associated proteins. However by increasing zinc concentration wider but shorter tubulin-sheets were found. These results suggest that microtubule associated proteins and zinc could promote nucleation of tubulin-sheets, but zinc also promotes lateral tubulin-tubulin interaction. This interpretation was confirmed when microtubule protein was assembled at a low zinctubulin ratio. In such conditions composite structures of microtubules and zinc tubulin-sheets arc formed. These composite structures are consequence of a lateral attachment of a zinc tubulin-sheet on a microtubule protofilament.  相似文献   

11.
A heat-stable microtubule-associated protein (MAP) with molecular weight of 190,000, termed 190-kD MAP, was purified from bovine adrenal cortex. This MAP showed the same level of ability to promote tubulin polymerization as did MAP2 and tau from mammalian brains. Relatively high amounts of 190-kD MAP could bind to microtubules reconstituted in the presence of taxol. At maximum 1 mol of 190-kD MAP could bind to 2.3 mol of tubulin. 190-kD MAP was phosphorylated by a cAMP-dependent protein kinase prepared from sea urchin spermatozoa and by protein kinase(s) present in the microtubule protein fraction prepared from mammalian brains. The maximal numbers of incorporated phosphate were approximately 0.2 and approximately 0.4 mol per mole of 190-kD MAP, respectively. These values were lower than that of MAP2, which could be heavily phosphorylated by the endogenous protein kinase(s) up to 5 mol per mole of MAP2 under the same assay condition. 190-kD MAP had no effects on the low-shear viscosity of actin and did not induce an increase in turbidity of the actin solution. It was also revealed that 190-kD MAP does not cosediment with actin filaments. These data clearly show that, distinct from MAP2 and tau, this MAP does not interact with actin. Electron microscopic observation of the rotary-shadowed images of 190-kD MAP showed the molecular shape to be a long, thin, flexible rod with a contour length of approximately 100 nm. Quick-freeze, deep-etch replicas of the microtubules reconstituted from 190-kD MAP and brain tubulin revealed many cross-bridges connecting microtubules with each other.  相似文献   

12.
Enhancement of tubulin assembly as monitored by a rapid filtration assay   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The early kinetics of microtubule formation from lamb brain tubulin isolated by affinity chromatography can be followed by a newly developed filter assay. The rapid collection of microtubules on glass fiber filters permits the calculation of the moles of tubulin polymerized. The filter assay gives both a rate and extent of polymerization that are identical to those obtained by turbidity or sedimentation analysis, respectively. The microtubules trapped by the filter are readily depolymerized by cold (t12= 3 min) and slowly by colchicine (t1/2= 32min). Tubulin purified by affinity chromatography requires a high protein concentration (>4 mg/ml) for polymerization. Although 5m glycerol allows polymerization to occur at tubulin concentrations below 2 mg/ml, the maximum amount of microtubule formation is observed at low tubulin concentration when microtubule-associated proteins are present. These proteins are not retained by the affinity resin; however, they can be eluted from diethylaminoethyl-Sephadex by solutions containing 0.3m KCl. Microtubule-associated proteins enhance both the rate of polymerization and the total amount of tubulin polymerized as assessed by the filter assay, suggesting that they are involved in both initiation and elongation of microtubules.  相似文献   

13.
Regulation of the microtubule steady state in vitro by ATP.   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
R L Margolis  L Wilson 《Cell》1979,18(3):673-679
ATP increases microtubule steady state assembly and disassembly rates in vitro in a concentration-dependent manner. Bovine brain microtubules, composed of 75% tubulin and 25% high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), were purified by three cycles of assembly and disassembly in the absence of ATP. When assembled to steady state, these microtubules add dimers at one end and lose them at the other in a unidirectional assembly-disassembly process. In the presence of 1.0 mM ATP the unidirectional flow of tubulin from one end of the microtubules to the other increases as much as 20 fold, as revealed by loss of 3H-GTP from uniformly labeled microtubules under GTP chase conditions and by the rate of disassembly following addition of 50 microM podophyllotoxin. UTP, CTP and 5' adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMP-PNP) cannot substitute for ATP in producing this effect. Furthermore, the increase in steady state flow rate persists afer ATP is removed. Thus microtubules assembled in ATP and centrifuged through sucrose cushions to separate them from nucleotides continue to exhibit increased rates in the next assembly cycle in the absence of ATP. It is possible that an ATP-dependent microtubule protein kinase is responsible for the observed increase in tubulin flow rate. A kinase activity associated with brain MAPs has been reported to be cAMP-dependent (Sloboda et al., 1975). We have found an adenylate cyclase activity associated with these microtubules. Whether the adenylate cyclase is a contaminant or due to a specific microtubules-associated protein, and whether its activity is functionally linked to the increased rate of assembly and disassembly in the presence of ATP, remain to be determined.  相似文献   

14.
Vesikin, a protein that can associate with squid axoplasmic vesicles or optic lobe microtubules, has been implicated as a force-generating molecule involved in microtubule-dependent vesicle transport [Gilbert and Sloboda, 1986, 1988]. Because vesikin crossreacts with an antibody to porcine brain microtubule associated protein 2 (MAP 2), studies were conducted to compare squid vesikin and brain MAPs. When taxol stabilized microtubules containing vesikin as a microtubule associated protein were incubated in the presence of ATP, vesikin dissociated from the microtubule subunit lattice. This behavior would be expected for an ATP-dependent, force generating molecule that serves as a crossbridge between vesicles and microtubules. When chick brain microtubules were treated under the same conditions, MAP 2 remained bound to the microtubules while MAP 1 dissociated in a manner similar to vesikin. One dimensional peptide mapping procedures revealed that, although digestion of vesikin and MAP 2 generated several peptides common to both proteins, vesikin and MAP 2 are clearly not identical. Furthermore, the addition of vesikin or MAPS 1 and 2 to purified tubulin stimulated microtubule assembly in a manner dependent on the concentration of added protein. These findings demonstrate that brain MAPs share characteristics common to squid vesikin and support the suggestion that brain MAPs 1 and 2 might act as a force generating complex for vesicle transport in higher organisms.  相似文献   

15.
Effects of the reagents suppressing or supporting axoplasmic microtubule assembly were studied on the Na ionic current of squid giant axons by perfusing the axon internally with the solution containing the reagent. Among the reagents suppressing the assembly, colchicine, vinblastine, podophyllotoxin, sulfhydryl reagents such as DTNB and NEM, and chaotropic anions such as iodide and bromide, were examined. These reagents reduced maximum Na conductance and shifted the voltage dependence of steady-state Na activation in a depolarizing direction along the voltage axis. They also made the voltage dependence less steep, but did not affect sodium inactivation appreciably. Effects on Na ionic current of reagents which support microtubule assembly (Taxol, DMSO, D2O and temperature) were opposite the effects of those agents suppressing assembly. At the same time, we demonstrated that after Na currents were partially reduced, they could be restored by internally perfusing the axon with a solution containing microtubule proteins, 260K proteins and cAMP under conditions favorable for microtubule assembly. For full restoration, it was found that the following conditions were necessary: (1) The microenvironment within the axon is suitable for microtubule assembly. (2) Tubulins incorporated into microtubules are fully tyrosinated at their C-termini. (3) A peripheral protein having a molecular weight of 260,000 daltons (260K protein) is indispensable. These results suggest that axoplasmic microtubules and 260K proteins in the structure underlying the axolemma play a role in generating Na currents in squid giant axons.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Sodium-orthovanadate (100-700 microM) added to purified pig brain microtubule protein (molar ratios 13-90 moles vanadate/mole tubulin) inhibits to a considerable extent the assembly (up to 65%) and the disassembly rates (up to 60%) of microtubules, as determined by turbidimetry. Vanadate added to preformed microtubules did not appreciably alter the turbidity level of the samples, however, the disassembly rates were decreased in the same manner as when vanadate was added prior to polymerization. Microtubule protein kept on ice for 3-6 hours became more susceptible to vanadate than freshly prepared protein. The effect of vanadate was independent of the GTP concentration at which the polymerization assays were performed (0.025 to 1 mM GTP). In the presence of taxol, which increases the rate and extent of microtubule formation, vanadate had no effect on assembly rates. Disassembly was inhibited, however, much less than in the presence of vanadate alone. Electron microscopy and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis did not reveal differences between microtubules prepared in the presence or in the absence of vanadate. This is consistent with the notion that vanadate does not interfere with the interaction between tubulin and the high-molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins. Apparently vanadate brings about an allosteric change of the microtubule protein(s) resulting in the abnormal polymerization kinetics of tubulin found in our study. The above results may be relevant for studies where the effects of vanadate on intracellular motility are interpreted as being solely due to a specific inhibition of ATPases.  相似文献   

18.
Two different proteins, tau and microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP 2), are able to stimulate tubulin polymerization into microtubules in vitro, but it is not certain if both proteins act by the same mechanism. We have examined the effects of tau and MAP 2 on the vinblastine-induced polymerization of tubulin into spiral filaments. In the presence of tau, vinblastine induced extensive aggregation of tubulin as shown by a large increase in turbidity. The increase in turbidity was accompanied by the formation of large numbers of spirals composed of a filament 40-60 A in diameter. The rate and extent of this aggregation into spirals were dependent on the concentrations of tubulin, tau, and vinblastine. Unlike normal microtubule assembly, this type of aggregation was not inhibited by colchicine or podophyllotoxin. In contrast, MAP 2, even at high concentrations, was less effective than tau at promoting the vinblastine-induced increase in turbidity of tubulin. In fact, MAP 2 strongly inhibited the effect of tau. These results indicate that tau and MAP 2 interact differently with the tubulin molecule in the presence of vinblastine and suggest that the two proteins may play different roles in regulating or promoting microtubule assembly. Vinblastine may thus be a useful probe in analyzing the modes of interactions of tau and MAP 2 with tubulin.  相似文献   

19.
Polymerization-deploymerization purified microtubules from mouse brain contain, in addition to tubulin, several minor proteins, including protein kinase activity. The protein kinase copurifies with microtubules in constant proportion to tubulin through two, three, or four cycles of polymerization; it can be resolved from tubulin by gel filtration chromatography and has an apparent molecular weight of 280,000. Its activity is stimulated 7-fold by cyclic AMP, and resembles the soluble brain protein kinase described by Miyamoto et al. (1). The microtubule preparation serves as an endogenous substrate for this protein kinase; both 6S and 30S tubulin are substrates for phosphorylation to the extent of about 0.10 ± 0.05 moles/mole.  相似文献   

20.
E Hamel  C M Lin 《Biochemistry》1984,23(18):4173-4184
A new method for separating microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) and tubulin, appropriate for relatively large-scale preparations, was developed. Most of the active tubulin was separated from the MAPs by centrifugation after selective polymerization of the tubulin was induced with 1.6 M 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonate (Mes) and GTP. The MAPs-enriched supernatant was concentrated and subsequently clarified by prolonged centrifugation. The supernatant (total soluble MAPs) contained almost no tubulin, most of the nucleosidediphosphate kinase activity of the microtubule protein, good activity in promoting microtubule assembly in 0.1 M Mes, and proteins with the electrophoretic mobility of MAP-1, MAP-2, and tau factor. The pellet, inactive in supporting microtubule assembly, contained denatured tubulin, most of the ATPase activity of the microtubule protein, and significant amounts of protein with the electrophoretic mobility of MAP-2. Insoluble material at this and all previous stages, including the preparation of the microtubule protein, could be heat extracted to yield soluble protein active in promoting microtubule assembly and containing MAP-2 as a major constituent. The total soluble MAPs were further purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography into bound and unbound components, both of which induced microtubule assembly. The bound component (DEAE-MAPs) contained proteins with the electrophoretic mobility of MAP-1, MAP-2, and tau factor. The polymerization reaction induced by the unbound component (flow-through MAPs) produced very high turbidity readings. This was caused by the formation of bundles of microtubules. Although the flow-through MAPs contained significantly more ATPase, tubulin-independent GTPase, and, especially, nucleosidediphosphate kinase activity than the DEAE-MAPs, preparation of a MAPs fraction without these enzymes required heat treatment.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号