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1.
The tau family of microtubule-associated proteins has a microtubule-binding domain which includes three or four conserved sequence repeats. Pelleting assays show that when tubulin and tau are co- assembled into microtubules, the presence of taxol reduces the amount of tau incorporated. In the absence of taxol, strong binding sites for tau are filled by one repeat motif per tubulin dimer; additional tau molecules bind more weakly. We have labelled a repeat motif with nanogold and used three-dimensional electron cryomicroscopy to compare images of microtubules assembled with labelled or unlabelled tau. With kinesin motor domains bound to the microtubule outer surface to distinguish between alpha- and beta-tubulin, we show that the gold label lies on the inner surface close to the taxol binding site on beta-tubulin. Loops within the repeat motifs of tau have sequence similarity to an extended loop which occupies a site in alpha-tubulin equivalent to the taxol-binding pocket in beta-tubulin. We propose that loops in bound tau stabilize microtubules in a similar way to taxol, although with lower affinity so that assembly is reversible.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
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   

5.
Effect of tau on the vinblastine-induced aggregation of tubulin   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Two microtubule-associated proteins, tau and the high molecular weight microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP 2), were purified from rat brain microtubules. Addition of either protein to pure tubulin caused microtubule assembly. In the presence of tau and 10 microM vinblastine, tubulin aggregated into spiral structures. If tau was absent, or replaced by MAP 2, little aggregation occurred in the presence of vinblastine. Thus, vinblastine may be a useful probe in elucidating the individual roles of tau and MAP 2 in microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

6.
Calpain I and II (EC 3.4.22.17) are Ca2+-activated neutral thiol-proteases. Isolated brain tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins were found to be good substrates for proteolytic degradation by brain calpain I and II. The assembly of microtubules was totally inhibited when the calpains were allowed to act on microtubule proteins initially, and a complete disassembly was found after addition of calpain I to assembled microtubules. The high-molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins were degraded within a few minutes following incubation with calpain as shown by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy. When calpain was added to pre-formed microtubules, either in the presence or in the absence of microtubule-associated proteins, the proteolysis was significantly reduced. When tubulin was pre-assembled by taxol, the formation of proteolytic fragments was decreased indicating that assembly alters the availability of tubulin sites for proteolytic cleavage by calpain. Digested tubulin spontaneously formed aberrant polymers. No considerable change of apparent net charge was seen, thus indicating that calpain cleaves off fragments containing neutral amino acid residues and/or that the fragments of tubulin remain associated as an entity with the same charge as native tubulin. The results suggest that the calpains act as irreversible microtubule regulators.  相似文献   

7.
The microtubule-associated protein TOGp, which belongs to a widely distributed protein family from yeasts to humans, is highly expressed in human tumors and brain tissue. From purified components we have determined the effect of TOGp on thermally induced tubulin association in vitro in the presence of 1 mm GTP and 3.4 m glycerol. Physicochemical parameters describing the mechanism of tubulin polymerization were deduced from the kinetic curves by application of the classical theoretical models of tubulin assembly. We have calculated from the polymerization time curves a range of parameters characteristic of nucleation, elongation, or steady state phase. In addition, the tubulin subunits turnover at microtubule ends was deduced from tubulin GTPase activity. For comparison, parallel experiments were conducted with colchicine and taxol, two drugs active on microtubules and with tau, a structural microtubule-associated protein from brain tissue. TOGp, which decreases the nucleus size and the tenth time of the reaction (the time required to produce 10% of the final amount of polymer), shortens the nucleation phase of microtubule assembly. In addition, TOGp favors microtubule formation by increasing the apparent first order rate constant of elongation. Moreover, TOGp increases the total amount of polymer by decreasing the tubulin critical concentration and by inhibiting depolymerization during the steady state of the reaction.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Alterations in the redox status of proteins have been implicated in the pathology of several neurodegenerative conditions including Alzheimer and Parkinson diseases. We report that peroxynitrite- and hydrogen peroxide-induced disulfides in the neuron-specific microtubule-associated proteins tau and microtubule-associated protein-2 are substrates for the ubiquitous thioredoxin reductase system composed of thioredoxin reductase, human or Escherichia coli thioredoxin, and NADPH. Tau and microtubule-associated protein-2 cysteine oxidation and reduction were quantitated by monitoring the incorporation of 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein, a thiol-specific labeling reagent. Cysteine oxidation of tau and microtubule-associated protein-2 to disulfides altered the ability of the proteins to promote the assembly of microtubules from purified porcine tubulin. Treatment of tau and microtubule-associated protein-2 with either the thioredoxin reductase system or small molecule reductants fully restores the ability of the MAPs to promote microtubule assembly. Thus changes in the redox state of microtubule-associated proteins may regulate microtubule polymerization in vivo.  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.
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   

12.
Taxol binds to polymerized tubulin in vitro   总被引:20,自引:8,他引:12       下载免费PDF全文
Taxol, a natural plant product that enhances the rate and extent of microtubule assembly in vitro and stabilizes microtubules in vitro and in cells, was labeled with tritium by catalytic exchange with (3)H(2)O. The binding of [(3)H]taxol to microtubule protein was studied by a sedimentation assay. Microtubules assembled in the presence of [(3)H]taxol bind drug specifically with an apparent binding constant, K(app), of 8.7 x 19(-7) M and binding saturates with a calculated maximal binding ration, B(max), of 0.6 mol taxol bound/mol tubulin dimer. [(3)H]Taxol also binds and assembles phosphocellulose-purified tubulin, and we suggest that taxol stabilizes interactions between dimers that lead to microtubule polymer formation. With both microtubule protein and phosphocellulose- purified tubulin, binding saturation occurs at approximate stoichiometry with the tubulin dimmer concentration. Under assembly conditions, podophyllotoxin and vinblastine inhibit the binding of [(3)H]taxol to microtubule protein in a complex manner which we believe reflects a competition between these drugs, not for a single binding site, but for different forms (dimer and polymer) of tubulin. Steady-state microtubules assembled with GTP or with 5’-guanylyl-α,β-methylene diphosphonate (GPCPP), a GTP analog reported to inhibit microtubule treadmilling (I.V. Sandoval and K. Weber. 1980. J. Biol. Chem. 255:6966-6974), bind [(3)H]taxol with approximately the same stoichiometry as microtubules assembled in the presence of [(3)H]taxol. Such data indicate that a taxol binding site exists on the intact microtubule. Unlabeled taxol competitively displaces [(3)H]taxol from microtubules, while podophyllotoxin, vinblastine, and CaCl(2) do not. Podophyllotoxin and vinblastine, however, reduce the mass of sedimented taxol-stabilized microtubules, but the specific activity of bound [(3)H]taxol in the pellet remains constant. We conclude that taxol binds specifically and reversibly to a polymerized form of tubulin with a stoichiometry approaching unity.  相似文献   

13.
Digestion of assembled microtubules with agarose-bound trypsin was performed to obtain microtubules which lack the extending projections, the non-tubulin-binding part of the high-molecular-weight microtubule-associated proteins. The assembly kinetics and the minimum protein concentration for assembly were the same for these trypsinated microtubules as for normal, untreated microtubules. Furthermore, the digested microtubules gave rise to the same change in turbidity per polymer mass as that found for normal microtubules. However, electron microscopy of pelleted microtubules revealed a closer packing after trypsin treatment. A substantially lower increase in specific viscosity was found upon assembly. At concentrations of above approx. 1.5 mg/ml, the viscosity of trypsin-treated microtubules was almost independent of the protein concentration, in contrast to the turbidity, which still increased. Both microtubules and the trypsin-digested microtubules were easily oriented by shear, although the flow linear dichroism signal for the microtubules after trypsin treatment was only half of that found for perfectly oriented normal microtubules. At higher shear force gradients, digested microtubules aggregated side by side as shown by electron microscopy. This was not found for normal microtubules. Even although the extending parts of the high-molecular-weight proteins are not needed for assembly, they were found to play an important role in microtubule orientation and interactions between microtubules, probably by acting as spacers between microtubules.  相似文献   

14.
Estramustine phosphate, an estradiol nitrogen-mustard derivative is a microtubule-associated protein (MAP)-binding microtubule inhibitor, used in the therapy of prostatic carcinoma. It was found to inhibit assembly and to induce disassembly of microtubules reconstituted from phosphocellulose-purified tubulin with either tau, microtubule-associated protein 2, or chymotrypsin-digested microtubule-associated protein 2. Estramustine phosphate also inhibited assembly of trypsin-treated microtubules, completely depleted of high-molecular-weight microtubule-associated proteins, but with their microtubule-binding fragment present. In all cases estramustine phosphate induced disassembly to about 50%, at a concentration of approximately 100 microM, at similar protein concentrations. However, estramustine phosphate did not affect dimethyl sulfoxide-induced assembly of phosphocellulose-purified tubulin. Estramustine phosphate is a reversible inhibitor, as the nonionic detergent Triton X-100 was found to counteract the inhibition in a concentration-dependent manner. The reversibility was nondisruptive, as Triton X-100 itself did not affect microtubule assembly, microtubule protein composition, or morphology. This new reversible MAPs-dependent inhibitor estramustine phosphate affects the tubulin assembly, induced by tau, as well as by the small tubulin-binding part of MAP2 with the same concentration dependency. This indicates that tau and the tubulin-binding part of MAP2, in addition to their assembly promoting functions also have binding site(s) for estramustine phosphate in common.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
The microtubule-associated protein tau was originally identified as a protein that co-purified with tubulin in vitro, stimulated assembly of tubulin into microtubules and strongly stabilized microtubules. Recognized now as one of the most abundant axonal microtubule-associated proteins, a convergence of evidence implicates an overlapping in vivo role of tau with other axonal microtubule-associated proteins (e.g. MAP1B) in establishing microtubule stability, axon elongation and axonal structure. Missense and splice-site mutations in the human tau gene are now known to be causes of inherited frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism linked to chromosome 17, a cognitive disorder of aging. This has provided direct evidence for the hypothesis that aberrant, filamentous assembly of tau, a frequent hallmark of a series of human cognitive diseases, including Alzheimer's disease, can directly provoke neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Tau, a microtubule-associated protein which copurifies with tubulin through successive cycles of polymerization and depolymerization, has been isolated from tubulin by phosphocellulose chromatography and purified to near homogeneity. The purified protein is seen to migrate during electrophoresis on acrylamide gels as four closely spaced bands of apparent molecular weights between 55,000 and 62,000. Specific activity for induction of microtubule formation from purified tubulin has been assayed by quantitative electron microscopy and is seen to be enhanced three- to fourfold in the purified tau when compared with the unfractionated microtubule-associated proteins. Nearly 90% of available tubulin at 1 mg/ml is found to be polymerizable into microtubules with elevated levels of tau. Moreover, the critical concentration for polymerization of the reconstituted tau + tubulin system is seen to be a function of tau concentration and may be lowered to as little as 30 μg of tubulin per ml. Under depolymerizing conditions, 50% of the tubulin at only 1 mg/ml may be driven into ring structures. A separate purification procedure for isolation of tau directly from cell extracts has been developed and data from this purification suggest that tau is present in the extract in roughly the same proportion to tubulin as is found in microtubules purified by cycles of assembly and disassembly. Tau is sufficient for both nucleation and elongation of microtubules from purified tubulin and hence the reconstituted tau + tubulin system defines a complete microtubule assembly system under standard buffer conditions. In an accompanying paper (Cleveland et al., 1977) the physical and chemical properties of tau are discussed and a model by which tau may function in microtubule assembly is presented.  相似文献   

19.
A high molecular weight protein has been partially purified from sheaths of squid giant axons. This protein fraction was capable of restoring the membrane excitability of the squid axon which had been destroyed by internal perfusion of microtubule poison, when perfused along with microtubule proteins (Matsumoto et al. (1979) J. Biochem. 86, 1155-1158). This protein, designated as 260 K protein, was purified by gel filtration and Con A-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The apparent molecular weight of the axonal protein was estimated to be 260,000 by electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecylsulfate. This protein was revealed to be a glycoprotein. When phosphocellulose-purified tubulin was incubated with 260 K protein at 36 degrees C in the presence of dimethylsulfoxide, turbidity of the solution was much increased. 260 K protein co-sedimented with microtubles assembled from purified tubulin. Light microscopic and electron microscopic observations revealed that the high turbidity was due to bundling of microtubules which was caused by 260 K protein. On the other hand, the effect of this protein on the turbidity increase was not so prominent when microtubules were assembled from microtubule proteins consisting of tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins. High shear and low shear viscometry and co-sedimentation experiments revealed that 260 K protein had little effect on actin polymerization under the same medium conditions as used in tubulin polymerization.  相似文献   

20.
Taxol-induced bundling of brain-derived microtubules   总被引:5,自引:4,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Taxol has two obvious effects in cells. It stabilizes microtubules and it induces microtubule bundling. We have duplicated the microtubule- bundling effect of taxol in vitro and report preliminary characterization of this bundling using electron microscopy, sedimentation, and electrophoretic analyses. Taxol-bundled microtubules from rat brain crude extracts were seen as massive bundles by electron microscopy. Bundled microtubules sedimented through sucrose five times faster than control microtubules. Electrophoretic analysis of control and taxol-bundled microtubules pelleted through sucrose revealed no striking differences between the two samples except for a protein doublet of approximately 100,000 daltons. Taxol-induced microtubule bundling was not produced by using pure tubulin or recycled microtubule protein; this suggested that taxol-induced microtubule bundling was mediated by a factor present in rat brain crude extracts. Taxol cross- linked rat brain crude extract microtubules were entirely labile to ATP in the millimolar range. This ATP-dependent relaxation was also demonstrated in a more purified system, using taxol-bundled microtubules pelleted through sucrose and gently resuspended. Although the bundling factor did not recycle with microtubule protein, it was apparently retained on isolated taxol-stabilized microtubules. The bundling factor was salt extracted from taxol-stabilized microtubules and its retained activity was demonstrated in an add-back experiment with assembled phosphocellulose-purified tubulin.  相似文献   

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