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1.
Pre-phosphorylation of the microtubule-associated protein MAP2 with the co-purifying cAMP-independent protein kinase (a) decrease the affinity of MAP2 for taxol-stabilised microtubules, (b) increases the dissociation rate constant for microtubule polymerisation, each of which is dependent upon the level of phosphorylation, but (c) has no effect on the association rate constant. Microtubule assembly has no effect on the kinetics of phosphorylation, whereas phosphorylation of pre-assembled microtubules causes their immediate depolymerisation at a rate which is proportional to the initial rate of phosphorylation. The results suggest that the modulated phosphorylation of MAP2 may regulate microtubule length in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Phosphorylation of microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) has a profound effect on microtubule stability and organization. In this work a consensus protein kinase A (PKA) phosphorylation site, T(220), of juvenile MAP2c is characterized. As confirmed by mass spectrometry, this site can be phosphorylated by PKA but shows less than average reactivity among the 3.5 +/- 0.5 phosphate residues incorporated into the protein. In contrast, T(220) is uniquely sensitive to dephosphorylation: three major Ser/Thr protein phosphatases, in the order of efficiency PP2B > PP2A(c) > PP1(c), remove this phosphate group first. MAP2c specifically dephosphorylated at this site binds and stabilizes microtubules stronger than either fully phosphorylated or nonphosphorylated MAP2c. Phosphorylation of this site also affects proteolytic sensitivity of MAP2c, which might represent a further level of control in this system. Thus, the phosphorylation state of T(220) may be a primary determinant of microtubule function.  相似文献   

3.
A major determinant of neuronal morphology is the cytoskeleton. And one of the main regulatory mechanisms of cytoskeletal proteins is the modification of their phosphorylation state via changes in the relative activities of protein kinases and phosphatases in neurons. In particular, the microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) family of proteins are abundant cytoskeletal components predominantly expressed in neurons and have been found to be substrates for most of protein kinases and phosphatases present in neurons, including glycogen-synthase kinase 3 (GSK3). It has been suggested that changes in GSK3-mediated MAP phosphorylation may modify MT stability and could control neuronal development. We have previously shown that MAP2 is phosphorylated in vitro and in situ by GSK3 at Thr1620 and Thr1623, located in the proline-rich region of MAP2 and recognized by antibody 305. However, the function of the phosphorylation of this site of MAP2 is still unknown. In this study, non-neuronal COS-1 cells have been co-transfected with cDNAs encoding MAP2C and either wild type or mutated GSK3beta to analyze possible effects on microtubule stability and on the association of MAP2 with microtubules. We have found that GSK3beta phosphorylates MAP2C in co-transfected cells. Moreover, this phosphorylation is inhibited by the specific GSK3 inhibitor lithium chloride. Additionally, the formation of microtubule bundles, which is observed after transfection with MAP2C, was decreased when MAP2C was co-transfected with GSK3beta wild type. Microtubule bundles were not observed in cells expressing MAP2C phosphorylated at the site recognized by antibody 305. The absence of microtubule bundles was reverted after treatment of MAP2C/GSK3beta wild type transfected cells with lithium chloride. Highly phosphorylated MAP2C species, which were phosphorylated at the site recognized by antibody 305, appeared in cells co-transfected with MAP2C and GSK3beta wild type. Interestingly, these MAP2C species were enriched in cytoskeleton-unbound protein preparations. These data suggests that GSK3-mediated phosphorylation of MAP2 may modify its binding to microtubules and regulate microtubule stability.  相似文献   

4.
We have developed a procedure to isolate the microtubule-associated protein 2c (MAP2c), a juvenile form of MAP2 occurring in mammalian brain. The shape, size, self-association, and antibody interactions of MAP2c were studied. Monomeric MAP2c is an elongated molecule with a length approximately 48 nm, considerably shorter than the higher molecular weight forms MAP2a or b of adult brain. Two monoclonal antibodies whose epitopes are near the N or C terminus, respectively, are located close to the opposite ends of the MAP2c rods. This places constraints on the types of internal folding of the molecule. MAP2c self-associates into dimers and fibrous aggregates. The dimers are predominantly antiparallel and nearly in register, as judged by antibody labeling.  相似文献   

5.
In previous work we have demonstrated that the microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP 2) molecule consists of two structural parts. One part of the molecule, referred to as the assembly-promoting domain, binds to the microtubule surface and is responsible for promoting microtubule assembly; the other represents a filamentous projection observed on the microtubule surface that may be involved in the interaction of microtubules with other cellular structures. MAP 2 is known to be specifically phosphorylated as the result of a protein kinase activity that is present in microtubule preparations. We have now found that the activity copurifies with the projection portion of MAP 2 itself. Kinase activity coeluted with MAP 2 when microtubule protein was subjected to either gel- filtration chromatography on bio-gel A-15m or ion-exchange chromatography on DEAE- Sephadex. The activity was released from microtubules by mild digestion with chymotrypsin in parallel with the removal by the protease of the MAP 2 projections from the microtubule surface. The association of the activity with the projection was demonstrated directly by gel filtration chromatography of the projections on bio-gel A-15m. Three protein species (M(r) = 39,000, 55,000, and 70,000) cofractionated with MAP 2, and two of these (M(r) = 39,000 and 55,000) may represent the subunits of an associated cyclic AMP- dependent protein kinase. The projection-associated activity was stimulated 10-fold by cyclic AMP and was inhibited more than 95 percent by the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase inhibitor from rabbit skeletal muscle. It appeared to represent the only significant activity associated with microtubules, almost no activity being found with tubulin, other MAPs, or the assembly-promoting domain of MAP 2, and was estimated to account for 7-22 percent of the total brain cytosolic protein kinase activity. The location of the kinase on the projection is consistent with a role in regulating the function of the projection, though other roles for the enzyme are also possible.  相似文献   

6.
Purified mitochondria from rat brain contain microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) bound to the outer membrane. Studies of binding in vitro performed with microtubules and with purified microtubule proteins showed that mitochondria preferentially interact with the high-molecular-mass MAPs (and not with Tau protein). Incubation of intact mitochondria with Taxol-stabilized microtubules resulted in the selective trapping of both MAPs 1 and 2 on mitochondria, indicating that an interaction between the two organelles occurred through a site on the arm-like projection of MAPs. Two MAP-binding sites were located on intact mitochondria. The lower-affinity MAP2-binding site (Kd = 2 x 10(-7) M) was preserved and enriched in the outer-membrane fraction, whereas the higher-affinity site (Kd = 1 x 10(-9) M) was destroyed after removing the outer membrane with digitonin. Detergent fractionation of mitochondrial outer membranes saturated with MAP2 bound in vitro showed that MAPs are associated with membrane fragments which contain the pore-forming protein (porin). MAP2 also partially prevents the solubilization of porin from outer membrane, indicating a MAP-induced change in the membrane environment of porin. These observations demonstrate the presence of specific MAP-binding sites on the outer membrane, suggesting an association between porin and the membrane domain involved in the cross-linkage between microtubules and mitochondria.  相似文献   

7.
Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) and tau, which is involved in Alzheimer's disease, are major cytoskeletal proteins in neurons. These proteins are involved in microtubule assembly and stability. To further characterize MAP2, we took a strategy of identifying potential MAP2 binding partners. The low molecular weight MAP2c protein has 11 PXXP motifs that are conserved across species, and these PXXP motifs could be potential ligands for Src homology 3 (SH3) domains. We tested for MAP2 interaction with SH3 domain-containing proteins. All neuronal MAP2 isoforms bound specifically to the SH3 domains of c-Src and Grb2 in an in vitro glutathione S-transferase-SH3 pull-down assay. Interactions between endogenous proteins were confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation using brain lysate. All three proteins were also found co-expressed in neuronal cell bodies and dendrites. Surprisingly, the SH3 domain-binding site was mapped to the microtubule-binding domain that contains no PXXP motif. Src bound primarily the soluble, non-microtubule-associated MAP2c in vitro. This specific MAP2/SH3 domain interaction was inhibited by phosphorylation of MAP2c by the mitogen-activated protein kinase extracellular signal-regulated kinase 2 but not by protein kinase A. This phosphorylation-regulated association of MAP2 with proteins of intracellular signal transduction pathways suggests a possible link between cellular signaling and neuronal cytoskeleton, with MAP2 perhaps acting as a molecular scaffold upon which cytoskeleton-modifying proteins assemble and dissociate in response to neuronal activity.  相似文献   

8.
From cloned DNA, neuraxin has been identified as a tubulin binding protein of predicted molecular weight of 94 kDa. The deduced sequence of the rat protein exhibits high homology to the C-terminal region of mouse microtubule-associated protein 5 (MAP5). Here, we show that different neuraxin antibodies recognize MAP5, but fail to detect a protein of 94 kDa, in subcellular and microtubular fractions of the rat central nervous system. Furthermore, tubulin binding by neuraxin was found to be dependent on taxol. These data are consistent with neuraxin corresponding to a C-terminal fragment of MAP5 that contains a low-affinity tubulin binding site.  相似文献   

9.
The stoichiometry of the dimer between microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) and tubulin has been determined by quantitative dodecylsulphate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to be 1:12 mol X mol-1, a value equal to the number of phosphorylation sites that can be labelled in vitro. The distribution of these sites along the MAP2 primary sequence has been determined by cleaving pre-labelled MAP2 with either alpha-chymotrypsin or at the five cysteine residues with nitrothiocyanobenzoic acid. The phosphorylation sites lie in two clusters: ten within the known tubulin-binding domain at one end of the primary sequence, and a pair midway along the sequence. It is postulated that the tertiary structure of MAP2 is folded to bring all twelve sites into association with the twelve tubulin dimers.  相似文献   

10.
The chick brain microtubule-associated protein MAP2 can be phosphorylated in vitro to the extent of 12 mol/mol with GTP at the same sites as can be labelled by the cyclic AMP-independent protein kinase utilizing [gamma-32P]ATP as the phosphoryl donor. Consequently, the microtubule protein is chemically modified by the conditions usually employed for studies of microtubule assembly, so that the derived kinetic parameters may not relate to steady-state conditions.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of phosphorylation on the binding of microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2) to cellular microtubules was studied by microinjecting MAP2 in various phosphorylation states into rat-1 fibroblasts, which lack endogenous MAP2. Conventionally prepared brain MAP2, containing 10 mol of endogenous phosphate per mol (MAP2-P10), was completely bound to cellular microtubules within 2-3 min after injection. MAP2 prepared in the presence of phosphatase inhibitors, containing 25 mol/mol of phosphate (MAP2-P25), also bound completely. However, MAP2 whose phosphate content had been reduced to 2 mol phosphate per mol by treatment with alkaline phosphatase in vitro (MAP2-P2) did not initially bind to microtubules, suggesting that phosphorylation of certain sites in MAP2 is essential for binding to microtubules. MAP2-P10 was further phosphorylated in vitro via an endogenously bound protein kinase activity, adding 12 more phosphates, giving a total of 22 mol/mol. This preparation (MAP2-P10+12) also did not bind to microtubules. Assay of the binding of these preparations to taxol-stabilized tubulin polymers in vitro confirmed that their binding to tubulin depended on the state of phosphorylation, but the results obtained in microinjection experiments differed in some cases from in vitro binding. The results suggest that the site of phosphate incorporation rather than the amount is the critical factor in determining microtubule binding activity of MAP2. Furthermore, the interaction of MAP2 with cellular microtubules may be influenced by additional factors that are not evident in vitro.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies with the mammalian brain have shown that the expression of a number of neuronal microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) is developmentally regulated. For example, the low-molecular-weight form of MAP2 (MAP2c) is abundant in neonatal rat brains and is less abundant in adults. Similarly, MAP5 levels decrease during postnatal development. Using monoclonal antibodies, we have followed the time of first appearance, cellular distribution, and molecular form of MAP2 and MAP5 during the morphogenesis of the quail retina. MAP2 first appears in ganglion cell bodies and in the axons of the optic fibre layer (OFL) at embryonic day 4 (E4). Anti-MAP2 staining remains restricted to these sites until E10, when staining appears in the inner plexiform layer (IPL). At E14, one day before hatching, anti-MAP2 staining is found in three broad laminae in the IPL, as well as in photosensitive cells. MAP5 is present in ganglion cell axons from the onset of neurite elongation at E3 and is limited to the OFL until E10. The intensity of anti-MAP5 staining in the OFL and optic nerve decreases after E7, which corresponds with a decrease in the number of actively growing ganglion cell axons. By E14, anti-MAP5 stains five layers in the IPL that correspond with layers of amacrine cell process arborizations. Western blots of E10 brain microtubule proteins show that MAP2 is represented by both a 260 x 10(3) Mr protein and a 60-65 x 10(3) Mr protein; the latter is much more abundant. Anti-MAP5 recognizes a 320 x 10(3) Mr brain microtubule protein in both the quail and the rat. We conclude that the cellular distribution, developmental regulation and molecular forms of MAP2 and MAP5 are similar in the rat and quail, suggesting that these molecules have conserved and hence fundamental roles in the growth and differentiation of neuronal processes.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Resting bovine platelets contain a microtubule coil which reorganizes into linear arrays upon thrombin activation. Microtubule arrays in both resting and activated platelets are extensively cross-linked. In an effort to determine the proteins responsible for this cross-linking, we have developed a method to isolate taxol-stabilized microtubule coils directly from platelet-rich plasma. Negatively stained coils are still cross-linked, and fine filamentous projections are seen between adjacent microtubules. Critical-point-dried rotary shadowed replicas of these coils most clearly demonstrate the projections radiating from individual microtubules as well as along the microtubule coil. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis of isolated coils shows many microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) present in addition to tubulin. One of these proteins, a 280 kDa MAP, cross-reacts with an antibody to bovine brain MAP 2 by immunoblot analysis. Immunofluorescence localization of this protein with both monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies demonstrates that it is associated with the microtubule coil in resting platelets and with the linear microtubule array present after thrombin activation. Immunoelectron microscopic localization demonstrates that projections from individual microtubules are labeled by the antibodies. We suggest that this MAP, along with several other potential MAPs, is responsible for the cross-linking and stability of bovine platelet microtubules.  相似文献   

15.
16.
This study characterizes effects of nerve growth factor (NGF) on the steady-state level and phosphorylation of a high molecular mass microtubule-associated protein in PC12 rat pheochromocytoma cells. Past work showed that NGF significantly raises the relative levels of this phosphoprotein, designated MAP1.2, with a time course similar to that of neurite outgrowth. To study this in greater detail, MAP1.2 in PC12 cell lysates was resolved by SDS-PAGE in gels containing 3.25% acrylamide/4 M urea and identified by comigration with material immunoprecipitated from the lysates by MAP1 antibodies. Quantification by metabolic radiolabeling with [35S]methionine or by silver staining revealed a 3.0-3.5-fold increase in MAP1.2 levels relative to total cell protein after NGF treatment for 2 wk or longer. A partial increase was detectable after 3 d, but not after 2 h of NGF exposure. As measured by incorporation of [32P]phosphate, NGF had a dual effect on MAP1.2. Within 15 min to 2 h, NGF enhanced the incorporation of phosphate into MAP1.2 by two- to threefold relative to total cell phosphoproteins. This value slowly increased thereafter so that by 2 wk or more of NGF exposure, the average enhancement of phosphate incorporation per MAP1.2 molecule was over fourfold. The rapid action of NGF on MAP1.2 could not be mimicked by either epidermal growth factor, a permeant cAMP derivative, phorbol ester, or elevated K+, each of which alters phosphorylation of other PC12 cell proteins. SDS-PAGE revealed multiple forms of MAP1.2 which, based on the effects of alkaline phosphatase on their electrophoretic mobilities, differ, at least in part, in extent of phosphorylation. Before NGF treatment, most PC12 cell MAP1.2 is in more rapidly migrating, relatively poorly phosphorylated forms. After long-term NGF exposure, most is in more slowly migrating, more highly phosphorylated forms. The effects of NGF on the rapid phosphorylation of MAP1.2 and on the long-term large increase in highly phosphorylated MAP1.2 forms could play major functional roles in NGF-mediated neuronal differentiation. Such roles may include effects on microtubule assembly, stability, and cross-linking and, possibly for the rapid effects, nuclear signaling.  相似文献   

17.
Sea urchin sperm contain two isozymes of creatine kinase (CrK) in the sperm head and tail, as termini of a phosphocreatine shuttle to transport energy. The head isozyme is located at the mitochondrion. By using an antibody prepared against denatured flagellar CrK, we now show that the tail isozyme exists along the entire flagellum. This unusual CrK isozyme, of Mr 145 kDa, is a component of the flagellar axoneme as indicated by electron microscopic immunolocalization and cell fractionation. Flagellar CrK specifically reassociated with extracted sperm axonemes as well as with in vitro polymerized sea urchin egg microtubules. Neither sperm mitochondrial CrK nor mammalian muscle CrK bound to axonemes under similar conditions. Thus, although the two sperm isozymes have similar kinetic properties, they differ in affinity for microtubules, a characteristic that may determine the regional differentiation needed for establishing a phosphocreatine shuttle.  相似文献   

18.
Extracellular and intraneuronal formation of amyloid-beta aggregates have been demonstrated to be involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease. However, the precise mechanism of amyloid-beta neurotoxicity is not completely understood. Previous studies suggest that binding of amyloid-beta to a number of targets have deleterious effects on cellular functions. In the present study we have shown for the first time that amyloid-beta 1-42 bound to a peptide comprising the microtubule binding domain of the heavy chain of microtubule-associated protein 1B by the screening of a human brain cDNA library expressed on M13 phage. This interaction may explain, in part, the loss of neuronal cytoskeletal integrity, impairment of microtubule-dependent transport and synaptic dysfunction observed previously in Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

19.
 Chicken gizzard smooth muscle has often been used as a source of proteins of the contractile and cytoskeletal apparatus. In the present study, we isolated a hitherto unknown doublet of proteins, with apparent molecular weights of 200 kDa, from embryonic chicken gizzard and showed its association with the microtubular cytoskeleton by cosedimentation with microtubules (MTs) and by immunofluorescence staining of cultured cells. Immunoblot analysis also revealed the ubiquitous expression of this protein in all embryonic chicken tissues examined. Molecular cloning techniques allowed its identification as the chicken homologue of the microtubule-associated protein 4 (MAP4), known from mammalian species, and revealed approximately 90% of its amino acid sequence. MAP4 is the major MAP of non-neuronal tissues and cross-species comparisons clearly demonstrated its highly conserved overall structure, consisting of a basic C-terminal MT-binding region and an acidic N-terminal projection domain of unknown function. Despite these conserved features, overall sequence homologies to its mammalian counterparts are rather low and focused to distinct regions of the molecule. Among these are a conserved 18-amino acid motif, which is known to mediate binding to MTs and a part of the MT-binding domain known as the proline-rich region, which is thought to be the regulatory domain of MAP4. The N-terminal 59 amino acids are a conserved and unique feature of the MAP4 sequence and might be an indication that MAP4 performs other functions besides the enhancement of MT assembly. Accepted: 13 March 1996  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the microtubule-associated protein MAP2 from porcine brain and its subfragments by limited proteolysis, antibody labeling, and electron microscopy. Two major chymotryptic fragments start at lys 1528 and arg 1664, generating microtubule-binding fragments of Mr 36 kDa (303 residues, analogous to the "assembly domain" of Vallee, 1980) and 18 kDa (167 residues). These fragments can be labeled with the antibody 2-4 which recognizes the last internal repeat of MAP2 (Dingus et al., 1991). The epitope of another monoclonal antibody, AP18 (Binder et al., 1986), was mapped to the first 151 residues of MAP2. The interaction with AP18 is phosphorylation dependent; dephosphorylated MAP2 is not recognized. Intact MAP2 forms rod-like particles of 97 nm mean length, similar to Gottlieb and Murphy's (1985) observations. Both antibodies bind near an end of the rod, suggesting that the sequence and the structure are approximately colinear. There is a pronounced tendency for MAP2 to form dimers whose components are nearly in register but of opposite polarity. MAP2 can also fold in a hairpin-like fashion, generating 50-nm rods, and it can self-associate into oligomers and fibers. The 36-kDa microtubule-binding fragment also has a rod-like shape; its mean length is 49 nm, half of the intact molecule, even though the fragment contains only one-sixth of the mass. The antibody 2-4 decorates one end of the rod, similar to the intact protein. The fragment also forms antiparallel dimers, but its tendency for higher self-assembly forms is much lower than with intact MAP2.  相似文献   

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