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1.
Estimation of the diffusion-limited rate of microtubule assembly.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Microtubule assembly is a complex process with individual microtubules alternating stochastically between extended periods of assembly and disassembly, a phenomenon known as dynamic instability. Since the discovery of dynamic instability, molecular models of assembly have generally assumed that tubulin incorporation into the microtubule lattice is primarily reaction-limited. Recently this assumption has been challenged and the importance of diffusion in microtubule assembly dynamics asserted on the basis of scaling arguments, with tubulin gradients predicted to extend over length scales exceeding a cell diameter, approximately 50 microns. To assess whether individual microtubules in vivo assemble at diffusion-limited rates and to predict the theoretical upper limit on the assembly rate, a steady-state mean-field model for the concentration of tubulin about a growing microtubule tip was developed. Using published parameter values for microtubule assembly in vivo (growth rate = 7 microns/min, diffusivity = 6 x 10(-12) m2/s, tubulin concentration = 10 microM), the model predicted that the tubulin concentration at the microtubule tip was approximately 89% of the concentration far from the tip, indicating that microtubule self-assembly is not diffusion-limited. Furthermore, the gradients extended less than approximately 50 nm (the equivalent of about two microtubule diameters) from the microtubule tip, a distance much less than a cell diameter. In addition, a general relation was developed to predict the diffusion-limited assembly rate from the diffusivity and bulk tubulin concentration. Using this relation, it was estimated that the maximum theoretical assembly rate is approximately 65 microns/min, above which tubulin can no longer diffuse rapidly enough to support faster growth.  相似文献   

2.
Isolated centrosomes nucleate microtubules when incubated in pure tubulin solutions well below the critical concentration for spontaneous polymer assembly (approximately 15 microM instead of 60 microM). Treatment with urea (2-3 M) does not severely damage the centriole cylinders but inactivates their ability to nucleate microtubules even at high tubulin concentrations. Here we show that centrosomes inactivated by urea are functionally complemented in frog egg extracts. Centrosomes can then be reisolated on sucrose gradients and assayed in different concentrations of pure tubulin to quantify their nucleating activity. We show that the material that complements centrosomes is stored in a soluble form in the egg. Each frog egg contains enough material to complement greater than 6,000 urea-inactivated centrosomes. The material is heat inactivated above 56 degrees C. One can use this in vitro system to study how the microtubule nucleating activity of centrosomes is regulated. Native centrosomes require approximately 15 microM tubulin to begin nucleating microtubules, whereas centrosomes complemented in interphase extracts begin nucleating microtubules around 7-8 microM tubulin. Therefore, the critical tubulin concentrations for polymer assembly off native centrosomes is higher than that observed for the centrosomes first denatured and then complemented in egg extracts. In vivo, the microtubule nucleating activity of centrosomes seems to be regulated by phosphorylation at the onset of mitosis (Centonze, V. E., and G. G. Borisy. 1990. J. Cell Sci. 95:405-411). Since cyclins are major regulators of mitosis, we tested the effect of adding bacterially produced cyclins to interphase egg extracts. Both cyclin A and B activate an H1 kinase in the extracts. Cyclin A-associated kinase causes an increase in the microtubule nucleating activity of centrosomes complemented in the extract but cyclin B does not. The critical tubulin concentration for polymer assembly off centrosomes complemented in cyclin A-treated extracts is similar to that observed for centrosomes complemented in interphase extracts. However, centrosomes complemented in cyclin A treated extracts nucleate much more microtubules at high tubulin concentration. We define this as the "capacity" of centrosomes to nucleate microtubules. It seems that the microtubule nucleating activity of centrosomes can be defined by two distinct parameters: (a) the critical tubulin concentration at which they begin to nucleate microtubules and (b) their capacity to nucleate microtubules at high tubulin concentrations, the latter being modulated by phosphorylation.  相似文献   

3.
S Roychowdhury  F Gaskin 《Biochemistry》1986,25(24):7847-7853
Two conflicting interpretations on the role of guanosine 5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) in microtubule protein and tubulin assembly have been previously reported. One study finds that GTP gamma S promotes assembly while another study reports that GTP gamma S is a potent inhibitor of microtubule assembly. We have examined the potential role of Mg2+ to learn if the conflicting interpretations are due to a metal effect. Turbidity, electron microscopy, and nucleotide binding and hydrolysis were used to analyze the effect of the Mg2+ concentration on GTP gamma S-induced assembly of microtubule protein (tubulin + microtubule-associated proteins) in the presence of buffer +/- 30% glycerol and in buffer with GTP added before or after GTP gamma S. GTP gamma S substantially lowers the Mg2+ concentration required to induce cross-linked or clustered rings of tubulin. These cross-linked rings do not assemble well into microtubules, and GTP only partially restores microtubule assembly. However, taxol will promote GTP gamma S-induced cross-linked rings of microtubule protein to assemble into microtubules. The effect of GTP gamma S on microtubule protein assembly in the presence of Zn2+ with and without added Mg2+ suggests that GTP gamma S also effects the formation of Zn2+-induced sheet aggregates. Purified tubulin was used in assembly experiments with Mg2+, Zn2+, and taxol to better understand GTP gamma S interactions with tubulin. The optimal Mg2+ concentration for assembly of tubulin is lower with GTP gamma S than with GTP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
We have investigated the differences in microtubule assembly in cytoplasm from Xenopus oocytes and eggs in vitro. Extracts of activated eggs could be prepared that assembled extensive microtubule networks in vitro using Tetrahymena axonemes or mammalian centrosomes as nucleation centers. Assembly occurred predominantly from the plus-end of the microtubule with a rate constant of 2 microns.min-1.microM-1 (57 s-1.microM-1). At the in vivo tubulin concentration, this corresponds to the extraordinarily high rate of 40-50 microns.min-1. Microtubule disassembly rates in these extracts were -4.5 microns.min-1 (128 s-1) at the plus-end and -6.9 microns.min-1 (196 s-1) at the minus-end. The critical concentration for plus-end microtubule assembly was 0.4 microM. These extracts also promoted the plus-end assembly of microtubules from bovine brain tubulin, suggesting the presence of an assembly promoting factor in the egg. In contrast to activated eggs, assembly was never observed in extracts prepared from oocytes, even at tubulin concentrations as high as 20 microM. Addition of oocyte extract to egg extracts or to purified brain tubulin inhibited microtubule assembly. These results suggest that there is a plus-end-specific inhibitor of microtubule assembly in the oocyte and a plus-end-specific promoter of assembly in the eggs. These factors may serve to regulate microtubule assembly during early development in Xenopus.  相似文献   

6.
Substoichiometric concentrations of tubulin-colchicine complex (TC) inhibits microtubule assembly through a copolymerization reaction between tubulin and TC. We have determined the rates and extent of TC incorporation into bovine brain microtubules and developed a theory that models copolymerization. Our analysis suggests that while the apparent association rate constants for tubulin and TC are similar, the apparent dissociation rate constants for TC are a factor of five or more larger than those of tubulin. Copolymer composition showed only slight changes during assembly despite changes in the solution phase and showed little dependence at high TC upon the initial tubulin concentration. The theory was based on coupled Oosawa-Kasai equations that allow for the co-assembly of two components, tubulin and TC. An expression was derived that relates copolymer composition to reaction mixture composition and to the affinity of microtubule ends for tubulin and TC. This expression predicts copolymer composition at TC concentrations less than 10 microM and correlates composition with assembly inhibition. We perceive copolymerization as a facilitated incorporation of TC requiring the presence of tubulin. TC incorporation was dependent on the ratio of total tubulin to the dissociation constant for TC bound to microtubule ends. The copolymerization reaction is thus characterized by an interplay of two effects (a) where tubulin facilitates the incorporation of TC into the microtubule, and (b) where TC inhibits the assembly of tubulin into microtubules.  相似文献   

7.
Current models of microtubule assembly from pure tubulin involve a nucleation phase followed by microtubule elongation at a constant polymer number. Both the rate of microtubule nucleation and elongation are thought to be tightly influenced by the free GTP-tubulin concentration, in a law of mass action-dependent manner. However, these basic hypotheses have remained largely untested due to a lack of data reporting actual measurements of the microtubule length and number concentration during microtubule assembly.Here, we performed simultaneous measurements of the polymeric tubulin concentration, of the free GTP-tubulin concentration, and of the microtubule length and number concentration in both polymerizing and depolymerizing conditions. In agreement with previous work we find that the microtubule nucleation rate is strongly dependent on the initial GTP-tubulin concentration. But we find that microtubule nucleation persists during microtubule elongation. At any given initial tubulin-GTP concentration, the microtubule nucleation rate remains constant during polymer assembly, despite the wide variation in free GTP-tubulin concentration. We also find a remarkable constancy of the rate of microtubule elongation during assembly. Apparently, the rate of microtubule elongation is intrinsic to the polymers, insensitive to large variations of the free GTP-tubulin concentration. Finally we observe that when, following assembly, microtubules depolymerize below the free GTP-tubulin critical concentration, the rate-limiting factor for disassembly is the frequency of microtubule catastrophe. At all time-points during disassembly, the microtubule catastrophe frequency is independent of the free GTP-tubulin concentration but, as the microtubule nucleation rate, is strongly dependent on the initial free GTP-tubulin concentration. We conclude that the dynamics of both microtubule assembly and disassembly depend largely on factors other than the free GTP-tubulin concentration. We propose that intrinsic structural factors and endogenous regulators, whose concentration varies with the initial conditions, are also major determinants of these dynamics.  相似文献   

8.
Binding of calmodulin to microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) was analyzed by the equilibrium gel filtration method. The apparent dissociation constant (Kd) of calmodulin binding was found to be 2 microM for tau, and 5 microM for MAP2. These Kd values were similar to the Kd previously determined for calmodulin binding to tubulin. The inhibitory effect of increasing concentrations of calmodulin on the kinetics of microtubule assembly from tau and tubulin was not mimicked by decreasing the concentration of tau alone or tubulin alone. These results suggest that calmodulin inhibits microtubule assembly by its binding to both MAPs and tubulin.  相似文献   

9.
At alkaline pH, Ca2+ is no longer required for S-100 proteins to inhibit the assembly and to promote the disassembly of brain microtubules in vitro, though the presence of Ca2+ significantly favors the S-100 effects. These effects are inversely related to the microtubule protein concentration and directly related to the S-100 concentration and the pH. Ca2+-independent, pH-regulated inhibition of assembly of phosphocellulose-purified tubulin by S-100 is also described. The microtubule disassembling effect of S-100 is additive to that of alkali (used to raise the pH), and S-100 further disassembles microtubules after alkalinization. Thus the larger inhibitory effect of S-100 on microtubule assembly at alkaline versus acid pH depends on both a decrease in the assembly rate and an increase in the disassembly rate. Together with previous data on this topic, the present findings indicate that S-100 proteins act on microtubule protein in vitro primarily by binding to tubulin, this event being Ca2+-regulated at a given pH, and pH-regulated at a given free Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

10.
Low molar ratios of heparin inhibited in vitro assembly of bovine brain microtubule proteins and disassembled preformed microtubules. Addition of purified microtubule-associated proteins counteracted the assembly inhibition by heparin. Our results suggest that the polyanion heparin affects microtubule assembly by binding to the microtubule-associated proteins. This complex can not support nucleation or stabilize the microtubule structure although it still can associate with the tubulin polymer. In the presence of heparin, the critical concentration needed for microtubule assembly was increased. Furthermore, the absolute assembly difference induced by heparin, the delta A350, was only dependent on the concentration and the molecular weight of heparin, not of the total microtubule protein concentration, or the addition of microtubule-associated proteins. Commercial, standard heparin (Mr 6000-25 000) had an I50 of about 0.1/tubulin dimer. The heparin fraction(s) with a high molecular weight had a stronger effect than those with lower molecular weight. Substoichiometric amounts of taxol completely relieved the inhibition of assembly by heparin, although aberrant forms were present. These microtubules had a reduced amount of coassembled microtubule-associated proteins, and furthermore contained heparin.  相似文献   

11.
Stathmin is a phosphorylation-regulated tubulin-binding protein. In vitro and in vivo studies using nonphosphorylatable and pseudophosphorylated mutants of stathmin have questioned the view that stathmin might act only as a tubulin-sequestering factor. Stathmin was proposed to effectively regulate microtubule dynamic instability by increasing the frequency of catastrophe (the transition from steady growth to rapid depolymerization), without interacting with tubulin. We have used a noninvasive method to measure the equilibrium dissociation constants of the T(2)S complexes of tubulin with stathmin, pseudophosphorylated (4E)-stathmin, and diphosphostathmin. At both pH 6.8 and pH 7.4, the relative sequestering efficiency of the different stathmin variants depends on the concentration of free tubulin, i.e. on the dynamic state of microtubules. This control is exerted in a narrow range of tubulin concentration due to the highly cooperative binding of tubulin to stathmin. Changes in pH affect the stability of tubulin-stathmin complexes but do not change stathmin function. The 4E-stathmin mutant mimics inactive phosphorylated stathmin at low tubulin concentration and sequesters tubulin almost as efficiently as stathmin at higher tubulin concentration. We propose that stathmin acts solely by sequestering tubulin, without affecting microtubule dynamics, and that the effect of stathmin phosphorylation on microtubule assembly depends on tubulin critical concentration.  相似文献   

12.
2-(4-Methyl-1-piperazinylmethyl) acrylophenone dihydrochloride (MPMAP) is a novel inhibitor of microtubule assembly in vitro and in vivo whose molecular mechanism of action has not been investigated (M. L. Mallevais, A. Delacourte, I. Lesieur, D. Lesieur, M. Cazin, C. Brunet, and M. Luyckx (1984) Biochimie 66, 477-482). We have examined the effect of MPMAP on the alkylation of tubulin by iodo[14C]acetamide and N,N'-ethylenebis(iodoacetamide) (EBI). MPMAP is a very potent inhibitor of tubulin alkylation by iodo[14C]acetamide. MPMAP gives half-maximal inhibition at a concentration of 15 microM. MPMAP also inhibits the alkylation of denatured tubulin and of aldolase, implying that it reacts strongly with sulfhydryl groups. MPMAP does not, however, interfere with formation by EBI of a crosslink between cysteines 239 and 354 in the beta subunit of tubulin, suggesting that these sulfhydryls are located in a cleft in the tubulin molecule.  相似文献   

13.
Interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) have been demonstrated to stimulate microtubule assembly measured in the in vitro assembly system. The process is substoichiometric occurring when the interferon concentrations are below that of tubulin. IFN-gamma is a more potent effector than IFN-alpha. The critical tubulin concentration describing microtubule assembly decreases from 1.5 mg/ml measured in the absence of added effector to 1.05 mg/ml and 1.3 mg/ml when measured in the presence of 2.16.10(-6) M IFN-gamma and 3.06.10(-6) M IFN-alpha, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
The polymerization of microtubule protein from beef brain is inefficient under the same conditions which are optimal for the assembly of microtubules isolated from hog brain (0.1 m piperazine-N,N′-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) buffer at pH 6.94). In examining the conditions required for microtubule polymerization in both beef brain extract and purified microtuble protein, it was determined that the pH optimum was pH 6.62 or 0.3 pH unit lower than the reported optimum for hog. Other assembly requirements (ionic strength, Mg2+ and nucleotide concentration, temperature) remained essentially the same as for hog. By separating and recombining fractions of tubulin and nontubulin components prepared from beef and hog microtubule protein, the requirement for the reduction in pH was found to be due to the tubulin and not to the microtubule-associated proteins. It was also determined that the efficiency of beef tubulin assembly, as measured by the yield of microtubule polymer, decreased rapidly after slaughter with a half-time of 19 min. Furthermore, when the overall efficiency of polymerization was reduced, the extent of assembly at each cycle of purification by disassembly and assembly was also observed to be depressed. The variations in the requirements for neuronal tubulin assembly in two closely related mammals suggest that the conditions required for assembly of microtubule protein in other tissues and cell types may also be different.  相似文献   

15.
The tubulin-colchicine binding reaction appears to involve a number of intermediate steps beginning with rapid formation of a transient preequilibrium complex that is followed by one or more slow steps in which conformational changes in tubulin and colchicine lead to formation of a poorly reversible final-state complex. In the present study, we investigated the relative ability of unliganded colchicine and preformed final-stage tubulin-colchicine complex to incorporate at microtubule ends and to inhibit addition of tubulin at the net assembly ends of bovine brain microtubules in vitro. Addition of 0.1 microM final-stage tubulin-colchicine complex to suspensions of microtubules at polymer-mass steady-state resulted in rapid incorporation of one to two molecules of tubulin-colchicine complex per microtubule net assembly end concomitant with approximately 50-60% inhibition of tubulin addition. Incorporation of colchicine-tubulin complex continued slowly with time, without significant additional change in the rate of tubulin addition. In contrast, addition of unliganded colchicine to microtubule suspensions resulted in incorporation of small numbers of colchicine molecules at microtubule ends and inhibition of tubulin addition only after periods of time that varied from several minutes to approximately 20 min depending upon the concentration of colchicine. Inhibition of tubulin addition beginning with unliganded colchicine increased slowly with time, concomitant with increases in the concentration of final-state tubulin-colchicine complex and the amount of colchicine bound per microtubule end. The results indicate that inhibition of tubulin incorporation at microtubule ends is caused by colchicine-liganded tubulin in the form of a final-state complex.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
It is much more difficult for tubulin from plant sources to polymerize in vitro than tubulin from animal sources. Taxol, a most widely used reagent in microtubule studies, enhances plant microtubule assembly, but hinders microtubule dynamics. Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), a widely used reagent in animal microtubule studies, is a good candidate for the investigation of plant microtubule assembly in vitro.However, proper investigation is lacking about the effects of DMSO on plant microtubule assembly in vitro.In the present study, DMSO was used to establish optimal conditions for the polymerization of plant tubulin. Tubulin, purified from lily pollen, polymerizes into microtubules at a critical concentration of 1.2mg/mL in the presence of 10% DMSO. The polymers appear to have a normal microtubule structure, as revealed by electron microscopy. In the presence of 10% DMSO, microtubule polymerization decreases when the pH of the medium is increased from 6.5 to 7.4. Both the polymerization rate and the mass of the polymers increase as temperature increases from 25 to 40 ℃. Tubulin polymerizes and depolymerizes along with cycling of temperature, from 37 to 4 ℃, or following the addition to or the removal of Ca2 from the medium. When incubated with nuclei isolated from tobacco BY-2 suspension cells, tubulin assembles onto the nuclear surface in the presence of 10% DMSO. Labeling lily pollen tubulin with 5- (and 6-)carboxytetramethyl-rhodamine succinimidyl ester (NHS-rhodamine) was performed successfully in the presence of 10% DMSO. Labeled tubulin assembles into a radial structure on the surface of BY-2 nuclei. The polymerization of lily pollen tubulin is also enhanced by microtubule-associated proteins from animal sources in the presence of 10% DMSO. All the experimental results indicate that plant tubulin functions normally in the presence of DMSO. Therefore, DMSO is an appropriate reagent for plant tubulin polymerization and investigation of plant microtubules in vitro.  相似文献   

17.
A new fluorophor for tubulin which has permitted the monitoring of microtubule assembly in vitro is reported. DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole), a fluorophor already known as a DNA intercalator, was shown to bind specifically to a unique tubulin site as a dimer (KD(app) = 43 +/- 5 microM at 37 degrees C) or to tubulin associated in microtubules (KD(app) = 6 +/- 2 microM at 37 degrees C) with the same maximum enhancement in fluorescence. When tubulin polymerization was induced with GTP, the change in DAPI affinity for tubulin resulted in an enhancement of DAPI binding and, consequently, of fluorescence intensity. DAPI, whose binding site is different from that of colchicine, vinblastine, or taxol, did not interfere greatly with microtubule polymerization. It induced a slight diminution of the critical concentration for tubulin assembly due to a decrease in the depolymerizing rate constant. Moreover, DAPI did not interfere with GTP hydrolysis correlated with tubulin polymerization, but it decreased the GTPase activity at the steady state of tubulin assembly. Even at substoichiometric levels DAPI can be used to follow the kinetics of microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

18.
Two tubulin variants, isolated from chicken brain and erythrocytes and known to have different peptide maps and electrophoretic properties, are demonstrated to exhibit different assembly properties in vitro: 1) erythrocyte tubulin assembles with greater efficiency (lower critical concentration, greater elongation rate) but exhibits a lower nucleation rate than brain tubulin, and 2) erythrocyte tubulin readily forms oligomers whose presence significantly retards the rate of elongation, suggesting that tubulin oligomers may also be important for determining the rate of assembly and the length of microtubules in erythrocytes. Erythrocyte tubulin isolated by cycles of in vitro assembly-disassembly is also demonstrated to contain a 67-kDa tau factor that greatly enhances microtubule nucleation but has little effect on elongation rates or critical concentration. Immunofluorescence microscopy with tau antibody indicates that tau is specifically associated with marginal band microtubules, suggesting that it may be important for determining microtubule function in vivo.  相似文献   

19.
The molecular aspects of the microtubule system is a research area that has developed very rapidly during the past decade. Research on the assembly mechanisms and chemistry of tubulin and the molecular biology of microtubules have advanced our understanding of microtubule formation and its regulation. The emerging view of tubulin is of a macromolecule containing spatially discrete sequences that constitute functionally different domains with respect to self-association, interactions with microtubule associated proteins (MAPs) and specific ligands. Recent studies point to the role of the carboxyl-terminal moiety of tubulin subunits in regulating its assembly into microtubules. These investigations combined with further studies on the spatial relationships between tubulin domains should provide new insights into the detailed structural basis of microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

20.
C M Lin  E Hamel 《Biochemistry》1987,26(22):7173-7182
We previously reported that direct incorporation of GDP (i.e., without an initial hydrolysis of GTP) into microtubules occurs throughout an assembly cycle in a constant proportion. The exact proportion varied with reaction conditions, becoming greater under all conditions in which tubulin-GDP increased relative to tubulin-GTP (low Mg2+ and GTP concentrations, high tubulin concentrations, and in the presence of exogenous GDP). These findings led us to explore further interrelationships of tubulin-GDP and tubulin-GTP in microtubule assembly. We have now determined the minimum amount of tubulin-GTP required for the initiation of microtubule assembly and the relative efficiency with which tubulin-GDP participates in microtubule elongation. When GTP, GDP, and tubulin concentrations were varied at a constant Mg2+ concentration (0.2 mM), initiation of assembly required that 35% of the nucleotide-bearing tubulin be in the form of tubulin-GTP, and incorporation of tubulin-GDP into microtubules during elongation was only 60% as efficient as would be predicted on the basis of its proportional concentration in the reaction mixtures. Very different results were obtained when the Mg2+ concentration was varied. Even though Mg2+ enhances the binding of GTP to tubulin (the equilibrium constant for the exchange of GTP for GDP was 0.2 in the absence of exogenous Mg2+, 3 with 0.2 mM Mg2+, 5 with 0.5 mM Mg2+, and 11 with 2 and 4 mM Mg2+), as Mg2+ was increased the proportion of tubulin-GTP required for the initiation of microtubule assembly rose greatly, and the direct incorporation of tubulin-GDP into microtubules during elongation became progressively more efficient. In the absence of exogenous Mg2+, only 20% tubulin-GTP was required for initiation, and tubulin-GDP was directly incorporated into microtubules half as efficiently as would be predicted on the basis of its concentration in the reaction mixture. At the highest Mg2+ concentration examined (4 mM), 80% tubulin-GTP was required for initiation of assembly, and tubulin-GDP was incorporated into microtubules as efficiently as tubulin-GTP.  相似文献   

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