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.
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(6):2847-2854
Taxol is a plant alkaloid that binds to and strongly stabilizes microtubules. Taxol-treated microtubules resist depolymerization under a variety of conditions that readily disassemble untreated microtubules. We report here that taxol-treated microtubules can be induced to disassemble by a combination of depolymerizating conditions. Reversible cycles of disassembly and reassembly were carried out using taxol-containing microtubules from calf brain and sea urchin eggs by shifting temperature in the presence of millimolar levels of Ca2+. Microtubules depolymerized completely, yielding dimers and ring-shaped oligomers as revealed by negative stain electron microscopy and Bio-Gel A-15m chromatography, and reassembled into well-formed microtubule polymer structures. Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), including species previously identified only by taxol-based purification such as MAP 1B and kinesin, were found to copurify with tubulin through reversible assembly cycles. To determine whether taxol remained bound to tubulin subunits, we subjected depolymerized taxol-treated microtubule protein to Sephadex G-25 chromatography, and the fractions were assayed for taxol content by reverse-phase HPLC. Taxol was found to be dissociated from the depolymerized microtubules. Protein treated in this way was found to be competent to reassemble, but now required conditions comparable with those for protein that had never been exposed to taxol. Thus, the binding of taxol to tubulin can be reversed. This has implications for the mechanism of taxol action and for the purification of microtubules from a wide variety of sources for use in self-assembly experiments.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
The association of brain tubulin, as measured by the temperature-dependent development of turbidity at 350 nm, is greatly stimulated by the detergent Nonidet P-40 in crude extracts of rat brain tissue. Stimulation of turbidity development is also obtained with partially purified rat brain tubulin treated with Nonidet or other detergents, or preincubated with phospholipase C or D; treatment with bovine pancreatic phospholipase A2 produces an inhibition. Exogenous phospholipids, diglycerides, other related derivatives, and lipophilic extracts of tubulin and brain supernatants can also alter the turbidity development. In addition, microtubules arising from tubulin obtained in the presence of Tween-20 or Nonidet P-40 exhibit a 50 and 100% increased specific viscosity, respectively, over that of tubulin prepared in the absence of detergent or in the presence of Kyro or Triton N-101. The effectiveness of these detergents in removing phospholipids from tubulin preparations follows a similar pattern: Nonidet P-40 removes 80%, Tween-20 removes 50%, and Kyro or Triton N-101 removes none. The total mass of microtubule formed, as determined by sedimentation, is the same regardless of the effect of the detergents on the viscosity. The microtubules obtained in the presence of Nonidet P-40 have a normal appearance when examined by electron microscopy, and their composition on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is indistinguishable from that of standard tubulin, especially with regard to the minor protein bands always present in the tubulin preparations. The results obtained suggest that the phospholipids associated to brain tubulin preparations might have a role in determining the association of tubulin and/or the final dimensions of the assembled microtubules.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
A H Lockwood 《Cell》1978,13(4):613-627
Cytoplasmic microtubule assembly from tubulin monomers requires an accessory protein or proteins present is isolated microtubules. These proteins have been designated "tau" factors. One such factor, tubulin assembly protein (TAP), has been purified to homogeneity from calf brain microtubules. A precipitating, monospecific antibody against the protein has been prepared. The antibody has been used to investigate the mechanism of TAP action in microtubule assembly and the distribution of TAP in cellular microtubules. Immunochemical, immunofluorescent and electron microscopic studies indicate that TAP functions stoichiometrically by binding physically to tubulin to form a complex active in microtubule assembly. TAP is an elongation protein which is required throughout the growth of a microtubule and which is actually present along the entire microtubule. Immunofluorescence microscopy has been used to demonstrate that TAP is distributed throughout the cytoplasmic microtubule network of cultured human, hamster and rat cells-both normal and virally transformed. Immunofluorescence of cells in mitosis shows that TAP is present in the mitotic spindle. These results demonstrate the biological importance of tubulin assembly protein and suggest that it or immunologically related "tau" proteins represent ubiquitous cofactors in cytoplasmic microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

7.
Taxol was used to prepare microtubules from unfertilized eggs of sea urchins Lytechinus pictus, Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis , and Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. By electron microscopy, these microtubules possessed normal morphology and were decorated with projections. The polypeptides present were tubulin plus microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) which included various high molecular weight polypeptides, and a Mr = 80,000 polypeptide. These MAPs were extracted from the microtubules by differential centrifugation in high ionic strength buffers, yielding a pellet of microtubules which were not decorated with projections. The Mr = 80,000 and high molecular weight MAPs were separated using Bio-Gel A-1.5 m chromatography, and shown to bind taxol-stabilized microtubules assembled from purified bovine brain tubulin. A dynein-like MgATPase activity is present in sea urchin egg extracts. 10-20% of this MgATPase co-pelleted with the taxol-assembled microtubules, under conditions where greater than 90% of the tubulin pelleted. During subsequent fractionation of the microtubules, by (i) high salt extraction followed by gel filtration or sucrose density gradient fractionation or (ii) ATP extraction, the MgATpase co-purified with high Mr MAPs. The MgATPase which remained in the microtubule-depleted egg extract was partially purified by (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, followed by Bio-Gel A-5 m and hydroxylapatite chromatography. The high Mr MAP MgATPase and the hydroxylapatite MgATPase both contained a prominent polypeptide (Mr approximately 350,000), which co-migrated on sodium dodecyl sulfate gels with the major heavy chain of dynein extracted from sperm axonemes. Our data suggest that this Mr approximately 350,000 polypeptide is cytoplasmic dynein.  相似文献   

8.
A protein of 15 kDa (p15) was isolated from Trypanosoma brucei subpellicular microtubules by tubulin affinity chromatography. The protein bound tubulin specifically both in its native form and after SDS-PAGE in tubulin overlay experiments. p15 promoted both the in vitro polymerization of purified calf brain tubulin and the bundling of preformed mammalian microtubules. Immunolabeling identified p15 at multiple sites along microtubule polymers comprising calf brain tubulin and p15 as well as on the subpellicular microtubules of cryosectioned trypanosomes. Antibodies directed against p15 did not cross react with mammalian microtubules. It is suggested that p15 is a trypanosome-specific microtubule-associated protein (MAP) that contributes to the unique organization of the subpellicular microtubules.  相似文献   

9.
Characterization and in vitro polymerization of Tetrahymena tubulin   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Tetrahymena tubulin was purified from the cell extract using DEAE-Sephadex A-50 ion-exchanger and ammonium sulfate precipitation. About 2.2% of the total protein in the 20,000 X g supernatant was recovered as DEAE-Sephadex-purified tubulin fraction. Applying the temperature-dependent polymerization-depolymerization method to this fraction in the presence of Tetrahymena outer fibers as a seed, almost pure tubulin was obtained. Tetrahymena tubulin dimer showed different behavior on SDS-polyacrylamide gels from porcine brain tubulin, and showed very low affinity for colchicine, amounting to about one-twentieth of the binding to porcine brain tubulin. The tubulin fraction failed to polymerize into microtubules by itself. Addition of a small amount of the ciliary outer fiber fragment induced polymerization as demonstrated by viscometric measurements, but the reconstituted microtubules were very unstable in the absence of glycerol. Microtubule-depolymerizing agents such as Ca2+ ions, low temperature, or colchicine all inhibited in vitro polymerization. Although Tetrahymena tubulin purified by the polymerization-depolymerization method could copolymerize with porcine brain microtubules, the DEAE-Sephadex-purified tubulin fraction suppressed the initial rate of porcine brain microtubule assembly in vitro. There seemed to be no differences between cytoplasmic tubulin and outer fiber tubulin in colchicine binding activity or SDS-gel electrophoretic behavior, or between the fine structure of both reconstituted microtubules observed by electron microscopy.  相似文献   

10.
Neutrophil activation by specific stimuli, such as the oligopeptide chemotactic factor fMet-Leu-(fMLF), is associated with an increased enzymatic addition of tyrosine to tubulin α -subunits, as measured by 14C tyrosine uptake. In studies using immunoblots we have found that this increased tyrosine uptake into tubulin in activated neutrophils reflects an increase in the proportion of cellular tubulin that is tyrosinated rather than simply an increase in the turnover of tyrosinated subunits. However, the increased accumulation of tyrosinated tubulin was also found to follow an initial depletion of tyrosinated tubulin and concomitant increase in detyrosinated tubulin between 0 and 60 sec following stimulation of neutrophils with fMLF. Immunogold electron microscopy studies of intact micro tubules recovered from activated neutrophils demonstrated that these rapid changes in the relative content of tubulin isoforms in the cells were not associated with the formation or disappearance of microtubule microdomains composed of only one form of tubulin. Previously, we have shown that under conditions of fMLF-stimulated exocytosis there is an increased binding of neutrophil granules to endogenous microtubules. Since neutrophil activation by fMLF is associated with increased tyrosination of α -tubulin subunits, we speculated that rapid changes in the levels of tyrosinated tubulin in the microtubules of activated neutrophils might have a role in the regulation of granule-microtubule interactions. When the binding of purified neutrophil granules to reconstituted rat brain microtubules containing approximately 50% tyrosinated tubulin was measured by electron microscopy and compared with granule binding to microtubules that contained no detectable tyrosinated tubulin, granule-microtubule associations were found to be significantly favored by detyrosinated vs. tyrosinated tubulin. These findings indicate that interactions between cytoplasmic granules and microtubules in activated neutrophils may be modulated by rapid changes in the relative content of detyrosinated and tyrosinated tubulin in the microtubule network of the cells. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Taccalonolide A is a microtubule stabilizer that has cellular effects almost identical to paclitaxel. However, biochemical studies show that, unlike paclitaxel, taccalonolide A does not enhance purified tubulin polymerization or bind tubulin/microtubules. Mechanistic studies aimed at understanding the nature of the differences between taccalonolide A and paclitaxel were conducted. Our results show that taccalonolide A causes bundling of interphase microtubules at concentrations that cause antiproliferative effects. In contrast, the concentration of paclitaxel that initiates microtubule bundling is 31-fold higher than its IC50. Taccalonolide A’s effects are further differentiated from paclitaxel in that it is unable to enhance the polymerization of tubulin in cellular extracts. This finding extends previous biochemical results with purified brain tubulin to demonstrate that taccalonolide A requires more than tubulin and a full complement of cytosolic proteins to cause microtubule stabilization. Reversibility studies were conducted and show that the cellular effects of taccalonolide A persist after drug washout. In contrast, other microtubule stabilizers, including paclitaxel and laulimalide, demonstrate a much higher degree of cellular reversibility in both short-term proliferation and long-term clonogenic assays. The propensity of taccalonolide A to alter interphase microtubules at antiproliferative concentrations as well as its high degree of cellular persistence may explain why taccalonolide A is more potent in vivo than would be expected from cellular studies. The close linkage between the microtubule bundling and antiproliferative effects of taccalonolide A is of interest given the recent hypothesis that the effects of microtubule targeting agents on interphase microtubules might play a prominent role in their clinical anticancer efficacy.  相似文献   

12.
Taccalonolide A is a microtubule stabilizer that has cellular effects almost identical to paclitaxel. However, biochemical studies show that, unlike paclitaxel, taccalonolide A does not enhance purified tubulin polymerization or bind tubulin/microtubules. Mechanistic studies aimed at understanding the nature of the differences between taccalonolide A and paclitaxel were conducted. Our results show that taccalonolide A causes bundling of interphase microtubules at concentrations that cause antiproliferative effects. In contrast, the concentration of paclitaxel that initiates microtubule bundling is 31-fold higher than its IC50. Taccalonolide A''s effects are further differentiated from paclitaxel in that it is unable to enhance the polymerization of tubulin in cellular extracts. This finding extends previous biochemical results with purified brain tubulin to demonstrate that taccalonolide A requires more than tubulin and a full complement of cytosolic proteins to cause microtubule stabilization. Reversibility studies were conducted and show that the cellular effects of taccalonolide A persist after drug washout. In contrast, other microtubule stabilizers, including paclitaxel and laulimalide, demonstrate a much higher degree of cellular reversibility in both short-term proliferation and long-term clonogenic assays. The propensity of taccalonolide A to alter interphase microtubules at antiproliferative concentrations as well as its high degree of cellular persistence may explain why taccalonolide A is more potent in vivo than would be expected from cellular studies. The close linkage between the microtubule bundling and antiproliferative effects of taccalonolide A is of interest given the recent hypothesis that the effects of microtubule targeting agents on interphase microtubules might play a prominent role in their clinical anticancer efficacy.Key words: taccalonolide, paclitaxel, microtubule stabilizer, microtubule targeted agent, tubulin, microtubule, laulimalide, antimitotic agent, drug persistence  相似文献   

13.
Baccatin III induces assembly of purified tubulin into long microtubules   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Chatterjee SK  Barron DM  Vos S  Bane S 《Biochemistry》2001,40(23):6964-6970
Baccatin III is widely considered to be an inactive derivative of Taxol. We have reexamined its effect on in vitro assembly of tubulin under a variety of conditions. We found baccatin III to be active in all circumstances in which Taxol is active: it assembled GTP-tubulin, GDP-tubulin, and microtubule protein into normal microtubules and stabilized these polymers against cold-induced disassembly. The effect of baccatin III on in vitro microtubule assembly was quantitatively assessed through determination of critical concentrations, which can be used to obtain the apparent equilibrium constants for the addition of tubulin subunits to growing microtubules. The apparent equilibrium constants for the growth reaction for baccatin III-induced GTP-tubulin and GDP-tubulin assembly measured at 37 degrees C were 4.2-4.6-fold less than those measured for Taxol-induced GTP-tubulin and GDP-tubulin assembly. These data indicate that the entire Taxol side chain contributes only about -1 kcal/mol to the apparent standard free energy of microtubule growth at 37 degrees C regardless of the nature of the E site nucleotide. These data also support the idea that the majority of the interactions between Taxol and tubulin that affect this equilibrium occur between the baccatin portion of the molecule and the binding site. We have also observed a structural difference in microtubules formed using baccatin III and Taxol. Baccatin III-induced microtubules were routinely much longer than those assembled by Taxol, even when very high concentrations of baccatin III were employed. One interpretation of these data is that baccatin III and Taxol differ in their abilities to nucleate GTP-tubulin. This difference in activity may have bearing on the large disparity in cytotoxicity of the two molecules.  相似文献   

14.
Myosin-Va was identified as a microtubule binding protein by cosedimentation analysis in the presence of microtubules. Native myosin-Va purified from chick brain, as well as the expressed globular tail domain of this myosin, but not head domain bound to microtubule-associated protein-free microtubules. Binding of myosin-Va to microtubules was saturable and of moderately high affinity (approximately 1:24 Myosin-Va:tubulin; Kd = 70 nM). Myosin-Va may bind to microtubules via its tail domain because microtubule-bound myosin-Va retained the ability to bind actin filaments resulting in the formation of cross-linked gels of microtubules and actin, as assessed by fluorescence and electron microscopy. In low Ca2+, ATP addition induced dissolution of these gels, but not release of myosin-Va from MTs. However, in 10 microM Ca2+, ATP addition resulted in the contraction of the gels into aster-like arrays. These results demonstrate that myosin-Va is a microtubule binding protein that cross-links and mechanochemically couples microtubules to actin filaments.  相似文献   

15.
F Solomon  M Magendantz  A Salzman 《Cell》1979,18(2):431-438
In this paper we describe a procedure for detecting proteins associated with cytoplasmic microtubules in vivo. Detergent-extracted cytoskeletons of NIL8 hamster cells are prepared under conditions which preserve the microtubules. The cytoskeletons are then extracted in the presence of calcium, which depolymerizes the microtubules and quantitatively extracted cytoskeletons are prepared from cells that have been incubated with colchicine. The cytoskeletons from these cells contain no microtubules or tubulin. Electrophoretic analysis of the calcium extracts of the colchicine-treated and untreated cells reveals several radioactively labeled polypeptides. There is, however, no apparent quantitative or qualitative difference between the two extracts other than the tubulin polypeptides. Each of the extracts is mixed with an excess of unlabeled calf brain microtubule protein and carried through cycles of temperature-dependent microtubule assembly. Distinct species from each extract co-assemble at a constant ratio, but only one polypeptide is uniquely derived from cells containing intact microtubules. The molecular weight of this polypeptide is similar to that proposed for the tau species detected in brain microtubule preparations.  相似文献   

16.
The impact of triethyl lead chloride was studied on: (i) the in vitro assembly and disassembly of microtubules from porcine brain by turbidometry and electron microscopy, (ii) the microtubule system of living mammalian cells using immunofluorescence microscopy, (iii) cell motility and chemotaxis employing the methods of phagokinetic track formation and the Boyden chamber assay, respectively, and (iv) thiol groups of the protein tubulin by their titration in the presence and absence of the organic lead compound. Triethyl lead chloride inhibited microtubule assembly and depolymerized preformed microtubules in vitro and in living cells. Random motility of cells was not markedly inhibited by triethyl lead chloride, whereas chemotaxis (directed cellular movement) was strongly inhibited. Triethyl lead chloride was found to interact with 2 thiol groups of the tubulin dimer. The interaction of triethyl lead chloride with the tubulin/microtubule system in vivo likely causes aneuploidy and is at least partly responsible for the cytotoxicity of the drug.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract– ATP-hydrolase activity is present in microtubules prepared from extracts of bovine splenic nerve.
The reassembled microtubules contain several proteins in addition to tubulin, including two which appear to be similar to the 'dynein-like' polypeptides found in preparations of brain microtubules by other authors.
The sensitivity of the ATP-hydrolase activity to Na+ and K+ ions and to ouabain suggests that it can be ascribed to a membrane-bound sodium transport ATP-hydrolase rather than to 'dynein-like' polypeptides. This view is supported by the presence of phospholipids in the microtubule preparations even though membrane fragments could not be demonstrated by electron microscopy.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) are identified as proteins that copurify with tubulin, promote tubulin assembly, and bind to microtubules in vitro. Higher plant MAPs remain mostly unknown. One example of non-tubulin carrot proteins, which bind to neural microtubules and induce bundling, has been reported so far [Cyr, R. J., & Palewitz, B. A. (1989) Planta 177, 245-260]. Using taxol, we developed an assay where higher plant microtubules were induced to self-assemble in cytosolic extracts of maize cultured cells and were used as the native matrix to isolate putative plant MAPs. Several polypeptides with an apparent molecular masses between 170 and 32 kDa copolymerized with maize microtubules. These putative maize MAPs also coassembled with pig brain tubulin through two cycles of temperature-dependent assembly-disassembly. They were able to initiate and promote MAP-free tubulin assembly under conditions of nonefficient self-assembly and induced bundling of both plant and neural microtubules. One of these proteins, of about 83 kDa, cross-reacted with affinity-purified antibodies against rat brain tau proteins, suggesting the presence of common epitope(s) between neural tau and maize proteins. This homology might concern the tubulin-binding domain, as plant and neural tubulins are highly conserved and the plant polypeptides coassembled with brain tubulin.  相似文献   

20.
Tobacco microtubule associated protein (MAP65) (NtMAP65s) constitute a family of microtubule-associated proteins with apparent molecular weight around 65 kDa that collectively induce microtubule bundling and promote microtubule assembly in vitro. They are associated with most of the tobacco microtubule arrays in situ. Recently, three NtMAP65s belonging to the NtMAP65-1 subfamily have been cloned. Here we investigated in vitro the biochemical properties of one member of this family, the tobacco NtMAP65-1b. We demonstrated that recombinant NtMAP65-1b is a microtubule-binding and a microtubule-bundling protein. NtMAP65-1b has no effect on microtubule polymerization rate and binds microtubules with an estimated equilibrium constant of dissociation (K(d)) of 0.57 micro m. Binding of NtMAP65-1b to microtubules occurs through the carboxy-terminus of tubulin, as NtMAP65-1b was no longer able to bind subtilisin-digested tubulin. In vitro, NtMAP65-1b stabilizes microtubules against depolymerization induced by cold, but not against katanin-induced destabilization. The biological implications of these results are discussed.  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