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1.
Tubulin was extracted from spindles isolated from embryos of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus and purified through cycles of temperature-dependent assembly and disassembly. At 37 degrees C, the majority of the cycle-purified spindle tubulin polymer is insensitive to free Ca++ at concentrations below 0.4 mM, requiring free Ca++ concentrations greater than 1 mM for complete depolymerization. However, free Ca++ at concentrations above 1 microM inhibits initiation of polymer formation without significantly inhibiting the rate of elongation onto existing polymer. At 15 degrees C and 18 degrees C, temperatures that are physiological for S. purpuratus embryos, spindle tubulin polymer is sensitive to free Ca++ at micromolar concentrations such that 3-20 microM free Ca++ causes complete depolymerization. Calmodulin purified from either bovine brain or S. purpuratus eggs does not affect the Ca++ sensitivity of the spindle tubulin at 37 degrees C, although both increase the Ca++ sensitivity of cycle-purified bovine brain tubulin. These results indicate that cycle-purified spindle tubulin and cycle-purified bovine brain tubulin differ significantly in their responses to calmodulin and in their Ca++ sensitivities at their physiological temperatures. They also suggest that, in vivo, spindle tubulin may be regulated by physiological levels of intracellular Ca++ in the absence of Ca++-sensitizing factors.  相似文献   

2.
Tubulin was purified from unfertilized eggs of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus by DEAE-column chromatography and cycles of temperature-dependent assembly and disassembly. Tubulin-containing column fractions self-assemble into intact microtubules in the absence of high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins. Egg microtubules assembled during the third cycle of assembly following DEAE-chromatography are composed of 2 or 3 alpha tubulins and 2 beta tubulins as assayed by isoelectric focusing and two-dimensional electrophoresis. The critical protein concentrations necessary for assembly of egg tubulin at 37 and 25 degrees C are 0.15-0.24 and 0.24-0.28 mg/ml, respectively. At physiological temperatures, the critical protein concentrations are 0.81 mg/ml at 15 degrees C and 0.70-0.79 mg/ml at 18 degrees C. At 18 degrees C, bovine brain microtubule-associated proteins stoichiometrically stimulate the initial rate and final extent of egg tubulin assembly. These hybrid microtubules assemble at 18 degrees C at a critical protein concentration of 4-20 micrograms/ml.  相似文献   

3.
Assembly of tubulin, purified from eggs of the sea urchin Stronglyocentrotus purpuratus, was examined at physiological (18 degrees C) and nonphysiological (37 degrees C) temperatures. Critical concentrations for assembly were 0.71 mg/ml at 18 degrees C and 0.21 mg/ml at 37 degrees C. At tubulin concentrations above 1.2 mg/ml at 18 degrees C and 0.5 mg/ml at 37 degrees C, a concentration-dependent "overshoot" in turbidity and in small-angle light scattering was observed; turbidity and scattering increased rapidly to a peak, then decreased asymptotically toward a steady-state value. Quantitative sedimentation analysis revealed that the mass of assembled polymer reached and maintained a constant level during overshoot of turbidity. Changes in the wavelength dependence of turbidity were consistent with the initial formation of sheets of tubulin, followed by conversion of the sheets to microtubules, both at 18 and 37 degrees C. Examination by negative-stain electron microscopy showed that sheetlike structures predominated during the early stages of overshoot assembly, while complete microtubules were present at steady state. Furthermore, measurements of average polymer length revealed that the overshoots in turbidity and in light scattering are unlikely to be caused by polymer length redistribution. Qualitative observations of solution birefringence suggested that the polymer became progressively more aligned during assembly. These results suggest that the turbidity/light-scattering overshoots reflect changes in the form or in the organization of the assembling polymer, or both.  相似文献   

4.
Assembly-competent tubulin was purified from the cytoplasm of unfertilized and parthogenetically activated oocytes, and from isolated meiotic spindles of the surf clam, Spisula solidissima. At 22 degrees C or 37 degrees C, Spisula tubulin assembled into 48-51-nm macrotubules during the first cycle of polymerization and 25-nm microtubules during the third and subsequent cycles of assembly. Macrotubules were formed from sheets of 26-27 protofilaments helically arranged at a 36 degree angle relative to the long axis of the polymer and were composed of alpha and beta tubulins and several other proteins ranging in molecular weight from 30,000 to 270,000. Third cycle microtubules contained 14-15 protofilaments in cross-section and were composed of greater than 95% alpha and beta tubulins. After three cycles of polymerization at 37 degrees C, unfertilized and activated oocyte tubulin self-assembled into microtubules at a critical concentration (Ccr) of 0.09 mg/ml. At the physiological temperature of 22 degrees C, unfertilized oocyte tubulin assembled into microtubules at a Ccr of 0.36 mg/ml, activated oocyte tubulin assembled at a Ccr of 0.42 mg/ml, and isolated meiotic spindle tubulin assembled at a Ccr of 0.33 mg/ml. The isoelectric points of tubulin from both unfertilized oocytes and isolated meiotic spindles were 5.8 for alpha tubulin and 5.6 for beta tubulin. In addition, one dimensional peptide maps of oocyte and spindle alpha and beta tubulins were very similar, if not identical. These results indicate that unfertilized oocyte tubulin and tubulin isolated from the first meiotic spindle are indistinguishable on the basis of assembly properties, isoelectric focusing, and one dimensional peptide mapping. These results suggest that the transition of tubulin from the quiescent oocyte state to that competent to form spindle microtubules in vivo does not require special modification of tubulin but may involve changes in the availability of microtubule organizing centers or assembly-promoting microtubule-associated proteins.  相似文献   

5.
The microtubules of Antarctic fishes, unlike those of homeotherms, assemble at very low temperatures (-1.8 degrees C). The adaptations that enhance assembly of these microtubules are intrinsic to the tubulin dimer and reduce its critical concentration for polymerization at 0 degrees C to approximately 0.9 mg/ml (Williams, R. C., Jr., Correia, J. J., and DeVries, A. L. (1985) Biochemistry 24, 2790-2798). Here we demonstrate that microtubules formed by pure brain tubulins of Antarctic fishes exhibit slow dynamics at both low (5 degrees C) and high (25 degrees C) temperatures; the rates of polymer growth and shortening and the frequencies of interconversion between these states are small relative to those observed for mammalian microtubules (37 degrees C). To investigate the contribution of tubulin primary sequence variation to the functional properties of the microtubules of Antarctic fishes, we have sequenced brain cDNAs that encode 9 alpha-tubulins and 4 beta-tubulins from the yellowbelly rockcod Notothenia coriiceps and 4 alpha-tubulins and 2 beta-tubulins from the ocellated icefish Chionodraco rastrospinosus. The tubulins of these fishes were found to contain small sets of unique or rare residue substitutions that mapped to the lateral, interprotofilament surfaces or to the interiors of the alpha- and beta-polypeptides; longitudinal interaction surfaces are not altered in the fish tubulins. Four changes (A278T and S287T in alpha; S280G and A285S in beta) were present in the S7-H9 interprotofilament "M" loops of some monomers and would be expected to increase the flexibility of these regions. A fifth lateral substitution specific to the alpha-chain (M302L or M302F) may increase the hydrophobicity of the interprotofilament interaction. Two hydrophobic substitutions (alpha:S187A in helix H5 and beta:Y202F in sheet S6) may act to stabilize the monomers in conformations favorable to polymerization. We propose that cold adaptation of microtubule assembly in Antarctic fishes has occurred in part by evolutionary restructuring of the lateral surfaces and the cores of the tubulin monomers.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
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   

8.
In the preceding paper [Golsteyn & Waisman (1989) Biochem. J. 257, 809-815] an EGTA-stable, Ca2+-binding heterodimer comprised of a 50 kDa protein and actin called '50K-A' was identified in the unfertilized eggs of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. In the present paper we have documented the binding of 50K-A to DNAase I and the effect of 50K-A on the kinetics of actin polymerization. When 50K-A was added to pyrene-labelled rabbit skeletal-muscle actin and the salt concentration increased, the initial rate of actin polymerization was inhibited by a very low molar ratio of 50K-A to actin. Furthermore, the steady-state level of G-actin was increased in the presence of 50K-A, suggesting that 50K-A caps the preferred end of actin polymer, shifting the steady-state concentration to that of the non-preferred end. Dilution of F-actin to below its critical concentration into 50K-A resulted in a much slower rate of depolymerization, consistent with capping of the preferred end. In contrast with the Ca2+-dependent binding to DNAase, the effect of 50K-A on the kinetics of actin assembly and disassembly was Ca2+-independent. These results suggest that 50K-A is a novel actin-binding protein with some similarities to the severin/fragmin/gelsolin family of F-actin-capping proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The colchicine-binding assay was used to quantitate the tubulin concentration in unfertilized Strongylocentrotus purpuratus eggs and to characterize pharmacological properties of this tubulin. Specificity of colchicine binding to tubulin was demonstrated by apparent first-order decay colchicine-binding activity with stabilization by vinblastine sulfate, time and temperature dependence of the reaction, competitive inhibition by podophyllotoxin, and lack of effect of lumicolchicine. The results demonstrate that the minimum tubulin concentration in the unfertilized egg is 2.71 mg per milliliter or 5.0% of the total soluble cell protein. Binding constants and decay rates were determined at six different temperatures between 8 degrees C and 37 degrees C, and the thermodynamic parameters of the reaction were calculated. delta H0=6.6 kcal/mol, delta S0=46.5 eu, and, at 13 degrees C, delta G=-6.7 kcal/mol. The association constants obtained were similar to those of isolated sea urchin egg vinblastine paracrystals (Bryan, J. 1972. Biochemistry. 11:2611-2616) but approximately 10 times lower than that obtained for purified chick embryo brain tubulin at 37 degrees C (Wilson, L.J.R. Bamburg, S.B. Mizel, L. Grisham, and K. Creswell. 1974. Fed Proc. 33:158-166). Therefore, the lower binding constants for colchicine in tubulin-vinblastine paracrystals are not due to the paracrystalline organization of the tubulin, but are properties of the sea urchin egg tubulin itself.  相似文献   

10.
Microtubule protein isolated from nucleated chicken erythrocytes was examined with respect to composition and assembly properties to determine its significance in a microtubule bundle called the marginal band. 1) The protein contains greater than 95% tubulin with small amounts of tau polypeptides and no high molecular weight polypeptides. 2) Microtubule assembly in vitro at 37 degrees C is characterized by low levels of nucleation, despite an abundance of ring oligomers at 5 degrees C, as indicated by long lag times, slow assembly rates, and microtubules that are twice as long as brain microtubules assembled under the same conditions. 3) By radioimmunoassay and sodium dodecyl sulfate gel analysis we determined that 0.6% of erythrocyte protein is tubulin of which three-quarters is in a nonextractable form and is associated with the microtubule bundle and the cell cortex. From these values the in vivo concentrations of total tubulin and tubulin dimer subunits are 2.4 and 0.7 mg/ml, respectively. The value of 0.7 mg/ml is close to the range of values of 0.1-0.6 mg/ml for the critical concentration of erythrocyte microtubule protein in vitro, suggesting that the assembly properties of tubulin in vitro and in vivo are similar.  相似文献   

11.
D Saltarelli  D Pantaloni 《Biochemistry》1983,22(19):4607-4614
We have shown previously [Saltarelli, D., & Pantaloni, D. (1982) Biochemistry 21, 2996-3006] that the tubulin-colchicine complex is able to polymerize in vitro into peculiar "curly" polymers, under the solution conditions permitting polymerization of unliganded tubulin into microtubules. Here it is further demonstrated that unliganded tubulin can be incorporated into these "curly" polymers. The partial critical concentration of tubulin-colchicine is decreased upon incorporation of unliganded tubulin into the copolymer. GTP hydrolysis occurs on unliganded tubulin upon incorporation in the copolymer. Tubulin-podophyllotoxin does not copolymerize with tubulin-colchicine to form a large polymer but interacts with it, preventing tubulin-colchicine polymerization. The data have been analyzed within a model of random copolymerization of unliganded tubulin and tubulin-colchicine into "curly" polymers. A corollary is that unliganded tubulin is virtually able to self-assemble into curly polymers with a critical concentration 10-fold higher than the critical concentration found for microtubule assembly. Consequently, these peculiar tubulin homopolymers cannot be observed except as transients at high concentrations, or when microtubule assembly is inhibited. Kinetic measurements of the T-TC copolymerization process and associated GTP hydrolysis at different T/TC ratios provide supplementary information about some privileged interactions between tubulin and tubulin-colchicine molecules. A comprehensive phase diagram of the various possible polymers formed in the presence of tubulin and tubulin-colchicine is presented.  相似文献   

12.
Chicken erythrocyte tubulin containing a unique beta tubulin variant polymerizes with greater efficiency (lower critical concentration) but at a slower rate than chicken brain tubulin. In a previous study we demonstrated that the low net rate of assembly is partly due to the presence of large oligomers and rings which reduce the initial rate of subunit elongation on microtubule seeds (Murphy, D.B., and Wallis, K.T. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 12293-12301). In this study we show that erythrocyte tubulin oligomers also retard the rate of microtubule nucleation and the net rate of self-assembly. The inhibitory effect is most likely to be due to the increased stability of erythrocyte tubulin oligomers, including a novel polymer of coiled rings that forms during the rapid phase of microtubule polymerization. The slow rate of dissociation of rings and coils into dimers and small oligomers appears to limit both the nucleation and elongation steps in the self-assembly of erythrocyte microtubules.  相似文献   

13.
At metaphase, the amount of tubulin assembled into spindle microtubules is relatively constant; the rate of tubulin association equals the rate of dissociation. To measure the intrinsic rate of dissociation, we microinjected high concentrations of colchicine, or its derivative colcemid, into sea urchin embryos at metaphase to bind the free tubulin, thereby rapidly blocking polymerization. The rate of microtubule disassembly was measured from a calibrated video signal by the change in birefringent retardation (BR). After an initial delay after injection of colchicine or colcemid at final intracellular concentrations of 0.1-3.0 mM, BR decreased rapidly and simultaneously throughout the central spindle and aster. Measured BR in the central half-spindle decreased exponentially to 10% of its initial value within a characteristic period of approximately 20 s; the rate constant, k = 0.11 +/- 0.023 s-1, and the corresponding half-time, t 1/2, of BR decay was approximately 6.5 +/- 1.1 s in this concentration range. Below 0.1 mM colchicine or colcemid, the rate at which BR decreased was concentration dependent. Electron micrographs showed that the rapid decrease in BR corresponded to the disappearance of nonkinetochore microtubules; kinetochore fiber microtubules were differentially stable. As a control, lumicolchicine, which does not bind to tubulin with high affinity, was shown to have no effect on spindle BR at intracellular concentrations of 0.5 mM. If colchicine and colcemid block only polymerization, then the initial rate of tubulin dissociation from nonkinetochore spindle microtubules is in the range of 180-992 dimers per second. This range of rates is based on k = 11% of the initial polymer per second and an estimate from electron micrographs that the average length of a half-spindle microtubule is 1- 5.5 micron. Much slower rates of tubulin association are predicted from the characteristics of end-dependent microtubule assembly measured previously in vitro when the association rate constant is corrected for the lower rate of tubulin diffusion in the embryo cytoplasm. Various possibilities for this discrepancy are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
We have compared the exchange kinetics of fluorescein-labeled calmodulin and tubulin in the spindles of living mitotic cells at metaphase. Cultured mammalian cells in early stages of mitosis were microinjected with labeled calmodulin or tubulin and returned to an incubator to allow equilibration of the fluorescent protein with the endogenous protein pools. Calmodulin becomes concentrated in the mitotic spindle, and treatments with inhibitors of tubulin assembly show that this concentration is dependent on the presence of microtubules. The steady-state exchange rates of both tubulin and calmodulin were measured by an analysis of fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching (FRAP), using cells pre-equilibrated to either 26 +/- 2 degrees C or 36 +/- 2 degrees C. A pulse of laser light focused to a 5-microns diameter column was used to destroy the fluorescence at one pole of a metaphase mitotic spindle. Ratios of fluorescence intensity from the two half-spindles and from the two polar regions were calculated for each image in a post-bleach time series to determine the rates and extents of FRAP. For tubulin, we confirm earlier observations concerning the temperature dependence of the extent of FRAP, but our data do not show a significant temperature dependence for the rate of FRAP. We hypothesize that the reduced extent of tubulin FRAP at the lower temperatures is a result of microtubules that are stable to depolymerization at 26 degrees C and are thus less likely to exchange subunits. Calmodulin's FRAP, however, does not exhibit any of the temperature dependence observed with fluorescent tubulin. At 26 +/- 2 degrees C calmodulin exchanges rapidly with the relatively stable population of microtubules, suggesting that calmodulin is bound, either directly or indirectly, to microtubule walls.  相似文献   

15.
Formation of microtubules at low temperature by tubulin from antarctic fish   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Tubulin was isolated from two species of antarctic fish, Pagothenia borchgrevinki and Dissostichus mawsoni, by cycles of temperature-dependent assembly, centrifugation, disassembly, and centrifugation. The preparations were found to consist almost entirely of tubulin and to contain negligibly small amounts of microtubule-associated proteins. This tubulin polymerized to make microtubules of ordinary dimensions. The formed microtubules appear to be in labile equilibrium with free tubulin dimer at all temperatures observed. In a buffer consisting of 0.1 M 1,4-piperazinediethanesulfonic acid, 2 mM dithioerythritol, 1 mM MgSO4, 2 mM ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid, and 1 mM guanosine 5'-triphosphate, pH 6.9, the tubulin of P. borchgrevinki has a critical concentration for assembly of 0.046 (+/- 0.008) mg/mL at 35 degrees C and 0.74 (+/- 0.15) mg/mL at the habitat temperature of the fish, -1.8 degrees C. The critical concentration measured at the lower temperature is quite small relative to the critical concentration for formation of mammalian microtubules from pure tubulin at the same temperature, which must be at least 2 orders of magnitude larger. The antarctic fish microtubules may thus be called "cold stable" by comparison with mammalian microtubules. They do not fully dissociate at temperatures near 0 degree C because they are composed of tubulin that assembles more readily at these temperatures than does mammalian tubulin. There is no evidence for the presence of a cold-stabilizing factor in association with the tubulin. These findings suggest that alteration of tubulin may be a means by which some poikilotherms can adapt to a cold environment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Microtubule assembly in vitro is sensitive to a variety of non-physiological sulfhydryl-oxidizing agents, but the physiological significance of this phenomenon is unknown, since no physiological sulfhydryl-oxidizing agent has been shown to affect microtubule assembly in vitro. We have accordingly investigated the interaction of tubulin with cystamine. We have found that millimolar concentrations of cystamine inhibit microtubule assembly and induce an abnormal form of tubulin polymerization. Cystamine-induced polymerization does not occur at cold temperature. Formation of the polymer requires reaction of cystamine with two sulfhydryls which become available at 37 degrees C. In addition, cystamine reacts with about three sulfhydryls at 0 degrees C without inducing polymerization. This latter set of sulfhydryls appear to include one or both of the previously defined beta s sulfhydryls whose reaction with N, N'-ethylene-bis(iodoacetamide) is markedly inhibited by GTP, maytansine and vinblastine [Roach, M. C. & Luduena, R. F. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12063-12071]. Cystamine's specific manner of interacting with tubulin suggests that it may mimic an endogenous sulfhydryl-directed regulator of microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

17.
Microinjection of fluorescent tubulin into dividing sea urchin cells   总被引:14,自引:13,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,97(4):1249-1254
To follow the dynamics of microtubule (MT) assembly and disassembly during mitosis in living cells, tubulin has been covalently modified with the fluorochrome 5-(4,6-dichlorotriazin-2-yl)aminofluorescein and microinjected into fertilized eggs of the sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus. The changing distribution of the fluorescent protein probe is visualized in a fluorescence microscope coupled to an image intensification video system. Cells that have been injected with fluorescent tubulin show fluorescent linear polymers that assemble very rapidly and radiate from the spindle poles, coincident with the position of the astral fibers. No fluorescent polymer is apparent in other areas of the cytoplasm. When fluorescent tubulin is injected near the completion of anaphase, little incorporation of fluorescent tubulin into polymer is apparent, suggesting that new polymerization does not occur past a critical point in anaphase. These results demonstrate that MT polymerization is very rapid in vivo and that the assembly is both temporally and spatially regulated within the injected cells. Furthermore, the microinjected tubulin is stable within the sea urchin cytoplasm for at least 1 h since it can be reutilized in successive daughter cell spindles. Control experiments indicate that the observed fluorescence is dependent on MT assembly. The fluorescence is greatly diminished upon treatment of the cells with cold or colchicine agents known to cause the depolymerization of assembled MT. In addition, cells injected with fluorescent bovine serum albumin or assembly-incompetent fluorescent tubulin do not exhibit fluorescence localized in the spindle but rather appear diffusely fluorescent throughout the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

18.
Tubulins were purified from the brain tissues of three Antarctic fishes, Notothenia gibberifrons, Notothenia coriiceps neglecta, and Chaenocephalus aceratus, by ion-exchange chromatography and one cycle of temperature-dependent microtubule assembly and disassembly in vitro, and the functional properties of the protein were examined. The preparations contained the alpha- and beta-tubulins and were free of microtubule-associated proteins. At temperatures between 0 and 24 degrees C, the purified tubulins polymerized readily and reversibly to yield both microtubules and microtubule polymorphs (e.g., "hooked" microtubules and protofilament sheets). Critical concentrations for polymerization of the tubulins ranged from 0.87 mg/mL at 0 degrees C to 0.02 mg/mL at 18 degrees C. The van't Hoff plot of the apparent equilibrium constant for microtubule elongation at temperatures between 0 and 18 degrees C was linear and gave a standard enthalpy change (delta H degree) of +26.9 kcal/mol and a standard entropy change (delta S degree) of +123 eu. At 10 degrees C, tubulin from N. gibberifrons polymerized efficiently at high ionic strength; the critical concentration increased monotonically from 0.041 to 0.34 mg/mL as the concentration of NaCl added to the assembly buffer was increased from 0 to 0.4 M. Together, the results indicate that the polymerization of tubulins from the Antarctic fishes is entropically driven and suggest that an increased reliance on hydrophobic interactions underlies the energetics of microtubule formation at low temperatures. Thus, evolutionary modification to increase the proportion of hydrophobic interactions (relative to other bond types) at sites of interdimer contact may be one adaptive mechanism that enables the tubulins of cold-living poikilotherms to polymerize efficiently at low temperatures.  相似文献   

19.
Crude actin extracts from acetone-dried powder of the muscle layer of bovine aorta contain an actin-modulating protein which promotes nucleation of actin monomers and decreases the average length of actin filaments in a Ca2+-dependent manner. This observation has allowed the development of an improved purification procedure for aorta actin which increases the yield 2- to 3-times. The actin obtained with this procedure consists of 77% alpha- and 23% gamma-isoelectric species. Pure aorta actin is indistinguishable from actins from skeletal, cardiac and chicken-gizzard smooth muscle in its polymerization rate, critical concentration, and reduced viscosity when polymerized with KCl at 25 degrees C. It differs from sarcomeric actins, but not from chicken-gizzard smooth muscle actin, in the temperature dependence of polymerization equilibria in KCl. This difference correlates with the amino acid replacements Val-17----Cys-17 and Thr-89----Ser-89, supporting a conclusion drawn from other studies that the N-terminal portion of actin polypeptide chain contains sites important for polymerization.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of the rate of rewarming on the survival of 8-cell mouse embryos and blastocysts was examined. The samples were slowly cooled (0.3--0.6 degrees C/min) in 1.5 M-DMSO to temperatures between -10 and -80 degrees C before direct transfer to liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C). Embryos survived rapid thawing (275--500 degrees C/min) only when slow cooling was terminated at relatively high subzero temperatures (-10 to -50 degrees C). The highest levels of survival in vitro of rapidly thawed 8-cell embryos were obtained after transfer to -196 degrees C from -35 and -40 degrees C (72 to 88%) and of rapidly thawed blastocysts after transfer from -25 to -50 degrees C (69 to 74%). By contrast, for embryos to survive slow thawing (8 to 20 degrees C/min) slow cooling to lower subzero temperatures (-60 degrees C and below) was required before transfer to -196 degrees C. The results indicate that embryos transferred to -196 degrees C from high subzero temperatures contain sufficient intracellular ice to damage them during slow warming but to permit survival after rapid warming. Survival of embryos after rapid dilution of DMSO at room temperature was similar to that after slow (stepwise) dilution at 0 degrees C. There was no difference between the viability of rapidly and slowly thawed embryos after transfer to pseudopregnant foster mothers. It is concluded that the behaviour of mammalian embryos subjected to the stresses of freezing and thawing is similar to that of other mammalian cells. A simpler and quicker method for the preservation of mouse embryos is described.  相似文献   

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