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1.
Assembly of brain microtubule proteins isolated from the Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, was found to be much less sensitive to colchicine than assembly of bovine brain microtubules, which was completely inhibited by low colchicine concentrations (10 microM). The degree of disassembly by colchicine was also less for cod microtubules. The lack of colchicine effect was not caused by a lower affinity of colchicine to cod tubulin, as colchicine bound to cod tubulin with a dissociation constant, Kd, and a binding ratio close to that of bovine tubulin. Cod brain tubulin was highly acetylated and mainly detyrosinated, as opposed to bovine tubulin. When cod tubulin, purified by means of phosphocellulose chromatography, was assembled by addition of DMSO in the absence of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), the microtubules became sensitive to low concentrations of colchicine. They were, however, slightly more stable to disassembly, indicating that posttranslational modifications induce a somewhat increased stability to colchicine. The stability was mainly MAPs dependent, as it increased markedly in the presence of MAPs. The stability was not caused by an extremely large amount of cod MAPs, since there were slightly less MAPs in cod than in bovine microtubules. When "hybrid" microtubules were assembled from cod tubulin and bovine MAPs, these microtubules became less sensitive to colchicine. This was not a general effect of MAPs, since bovine MAPs did not induce a colchicine stability of microtubules assembled from bovine tubulin. We can therefore conclude that MAPs can induce colchicine stability of colchicine labile acetylated tubulin.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: Intact neurofilaments (NF) purified from mammalian brain and spinal cord promote the assembly of microtubules in solutions of pure phosphocellulose (PC)-purified tubulin. This assembly is temperature-dependent and is inhibited by mitotic spindle inhibitors. The ability of NF to induce microtubule formation is 20% of that of purified microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), whereas MAPs comprise less than 5% of the protein in the NF preparations. The inducing activity of NF is rapidly lost on boiling. When intact NF are incubated with PC-tubulin and then centrifuged, tubulin is sedimented together with the filaments. This association is inhibited by colchicine and podophyllotoxin and is cold-sensitive. NF purified to homogeneity under denaturing conditions and then reassembled completely lack the ability to promote the assembly of PC-tubulin or to bind tubulin on a centrifugation assay. No MAPs are present in these preparations, though these filaments have the ability to bind exogenous MAPs. While these experiments do not rule out an intrinsic microtubule-assembly-promoting activity, they suggest that this activity is due to nontriplet proteins in the preparation, most likely filament-associated MAPs.  相似文献   

3.
E Hamel  C M Lin 《Biochemistry》1984,23(18):4173-4184
A new method for separating microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) and tubulin, appropriate for relatively large-scale preparations, was developed. Most of the active tubulin was separated from the MAPs by centrifugation after selective polymerization of the tubulin was induced with 1.6 M 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonate (Mes) and GTP. The MAPs-enriched supernatant was concentrated and subsequently clarified by prolonged centrifugation. The supernatant (total soluble MAPs) contained almost no tubulin, most of the nucleosidediphosphate kinase activity of the microtubule protein, good activity in promoting microtubule assembly in 0.1 M Mes, and proteins with the electrophoretic mobility of MAP-1, MAP-2, and tau factor. The pellet, inactive in supporting microtubule assembly, contained denatured tubulin, most of the ATPase activity of the microtubule protein, and significant amounts of protein with the electrophoretic mobility of MAP-2. Insoluble material at this and all previous stages, including the preparation of the microtubule protein, could be heat extracted to yield soluble protein active in promoting microtubule assembly and containing MAP-2 as a major constituent. The total soluble MAPs were further purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography into bound and unbound components, both of which induced microtubule assembly. The bound component (DEAE-MAPs) contained proteins with the electrophoretic mobility of MAP-1, MAP-2, and tau factor. The polymerization reaction induced by the unbound component (flow-through MAPs) produced very high turbidity readings. This was caused by the formation of bundles of microtubules. Although the flow-through MAPs contained significantly more ATPase, tubulin-independent GTPase, and, especially, nucleosidediphosphate kinase activity than the DEAE-MAPs, preparation of a MAPs fraction without these enzymes required heat treatment.  相似文献   

4.
An ATPase activity was found in rat brain microtubules prepared by successive cycles of polymerization and depolymerization. On phosphocellulose column chromatography, the ATPase activity was recovered in the fraction eluted with 0.6 M KCl and containing the microtubule associated proteins. The ATPase activity was markedly stimulated by the addition of purified brain 6S tubulin, and the stimulation was dependent on the presence of Ca2+ ions. Approximately 50 pmol of purified 6S tubulin was required for the maximal stimulation in the presence of 8 microgram of microtubule associated proteins. The specific activity was 8 to 13 nmol of ATP hydrolyzed per min per mg of protein at 37 degrees C, and the Km value for ATP was 3 X 10(-5) M in the presence of added tubulin.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Vesikin, a protein that can associate with squid axoplasmic vesicles or optic lobe microtubules, has been implicated as a force-generating molecule involved in microtubule-dependent vesicle transport [Gilbert and Sloboda, 1986, 1988]. Because vesikin crossreacts with an antibody to porcine brain microtubule associated protein 2 (MAP 2), studies were conducted to compare squid vesikin and brain MAPs. When taxol stabilized microtubules containing vesikin as a microtubule associated protein were incubated in the presence of ATP, vesikin dissociated from the microtubule subunit lattice. This behavior would be expected for an ATP-dependent, force generating molecule that serves as a crossbridge between vesicles and microtubules. When chick brain microtubules were treated under the same conditions, MAP 2 remained bound to the microtubules while MAP 1 dissociated in a manner similar to vesikin. One dimensional peptide mapping procedures revealed that, although digestion of vesikin and MAP 2 generated several peptides common to both proteins, vesikin and MAP 2 are clearly not identical. Furthermore, the addition of vesikin or MAPS 1 and 2 to purified tubulin stimulated microtubule assembly in a manner dependent on the concentration of added protein. These findings demonstrate that brain MAPs share characteristics common to squid vesikin and support the suggestion that brain MAPs 1 and 2 might act as a force generating complex for vesicle transport in higher organisms.  相似文献   

7.
Purified actin and microtubule proteins polymerized together form a gel, while mixtures of actin with tubulin polymers lacking microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) have low viscosities close to the sum of the viscosities of the constituents. Mixtures of actin and MAPs also have high viscosities. Our interpretation of these observations was that there is interaction of actin filaments and microtubules which is mediated by MAPs (Griffith, L. M., and Pollard, T. D. (1978) J. Cell Biol. 78, 958-965). We report here further evidence for this interaction. 1) Actin filaments and microtubules can form gels at physiological ionic strength providing the anion is glutamate rather than chloride. Both glutamate and chloride inhibit actin-MAPs interaction, but this is compensated for in glutamate where the microtubules are longer than in chloride. 2) The low shear viscosity of mixtures of isolated MAPs and actin filaments is enhanced by acidic pH and inhibited by high ionic strength. 3) MAPs can be fractionated to yield four different fractions with actin cross-linking activity: a subset of high molecular weight MAPs, purified "MAP-2" and two different fractions of tau polypeptides. 4) We have reconstituted a gel from actin, purified tubulin, and whole MAPs, but have not yet been successful with actin, purified tubulin, and any single purified MAP.  相似文献   

8.
Microtubule-associated proteins from Antarctic fishes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microtubules and presumptive microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) were isolated from the brain tissues of four Antarctic fishes (Notothenia gibberifrons, N. coriiceps neglecta, Chaenocephalus aceratus, and a Chionodraco sp.) by means of a taxol-dependent, microtubule-affinity procedure (cf. Vallee: Journal of Cell Biology 92:435-442, 1982). MAPs from these fishes were similar to each other in electrophoretic pattern. Prominent in each preparation were proteins in the molecular weight ranges 410,000-430,000, 220,000-280,000, 140,000-155,000, 85,000-95,000, 40,000-45,000, and 32,000-34,000. The surfaces of MAP-rich microtubules were decorated by numerous filamentous projections. Exposure to elevated ionic strength released the MAPs from the microtubules and also removed the filamentous projections. Addition of fish MAPs to subcritical concentrations of fish tubulins at 0-5 degrees C induced the assembly of microtubules. Both the rate and the extent of this assembly increased with increasing concentrations of the MAPs. Sedimentation revealed that approximately six proteins, with apparent molecular weights between 60,000 and 300,000, became incorporated into the microtubule polymer. Bovine MAPs promoted microtubule formation by fish tubulin at 2-5 degrees C, and proteins corresponding to MAPs 1 and 2 co-sedimented with the polymer. MAPs from C. aceratus also enhanced the polymerization of bovine tubulin at 33 degrees C, but the microtubules depolymerized at 0 degrees C. We conclude that MAPs are part of the microtubules of Antarctic fishes, that these proteins promote microtubule assembly in much the same way as mammalian MAPs, and that they do not possess special capacities to promote microtubule assembly at low temperatures or to prevent cold-induced microtubule depolymerization.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of the antimitotic drug taxol on the association of MAPs (microtubule-associated proteins) with microtubules was investigated. Extensive microtubule assembly occurred in the presence of Taxol at 37 degrees C. at 0 degrees C, and at 37 degrees C in the presence of 0.35 M NaCl, overcoming the inhibition of assembly normally observed under the latter two conditions. At 37 degrees C and at 0 degrees C, complete assembly of both tubulin and the MAPs was observed in the presence of Taxol. However, at elevated ionic strength, only tubulin assembled, forming microtubules devoid of MAPs. The MAPs could also be released from the surface of preformed microtubules by exposure to elevated ionic strength. These properties provided the basis for a rapid new procedure for isolating microtubules and MAPs of high purity from small amounts of biological material. The MAPs could be recovered by exposure of the microtubules to elevated ionic strength and subjected to further analysis. Microtubules and MAPs were prepared from bovine cerebral cortex (gray matter) and from HeLa cells. MAP 1, MAP2, and the tau MAPs, as well as species of Mr = 28,000 and 30,000 (LMW, or low molecular weight, MAPs) and a species of Mr = 70,000 were isolated from gray matter. Species identified as the 210,000 and 125,000 mol wt HeLa MAPs were isolated from HeLa cells. Microtubules were also prepared for the first time from white matter. All of the MAPs identified in gray matter preparations were identified in white matter, but the amounts of individual MAP species differed. The most striking difference in the two preparations was a fivefold lower level of MAP 2 relative to tubulin in white matter than in gray. The high molecular weigh MAP, MAP1, was present in equal ratio to tubulin in white and gray matter. These results indicate that MAP 1 and MAP2, as well as other MAP species, may have a different cellular or subcellular distribution.  相似文献   

10.
Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) were phosphorylated by a Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase from rat brain cytosol. The maximal amount of phosphate incorporated into MAPs was 25 nmol of phosphate/mg protein. A Ka value of the enzyme for calmodulin was 57.0 nM, with MAPs as substrates. Among MAPs, MAP2 and tau factor were phosphorylated in a Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent manner. The phosphorylation of MAPs led to an inhibition of microtubule assembly in accordance with its degree. This reaction was dependent on addition of the enzyme, Ca2+, and calmodulin, and had a greater effect on the initial rate of microtubule assembly rather than on the final extent. The critical tubulin concentration for microtubule assembly was unchanged by the MAPs phosphorylation. Therefore assembly and disassembly of brain microtubule are regulated by the Ca2+- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase that requires only a nanomolar concentration of calmodulin for activation.  相似文献   

11.
The periodic association of MAP2 with brain microtubules in vitro   总被引:72,自引:41,他引:31       下载免费PDF全文
Several high molecular weight polypeptides have been shown to quantitatively copurify with brain tubulin during cycles of in vitro assembly-disassembly. These microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) have been shown to influence the rate and extent of microtubule assembly in vitro. We report here that a heat-stable fraction highly enriched for one of the MAPs, MAP2 (mol wt approximately 300,000 daltons), devoid of MAP1 (mol wt approximately 350,000 daltons), has been purified from calf neurotubules. This MAP2 fraction stoichiometrically promotes microtubule assembly, lowering the critical concentration for tubulin assembly to 0.05 mg/ml. Microtubules saturated with MAP2 contain MAP2 and tubulin in a molar ratio of approximately 1 mole of MAP2 to 9 moles of tubulin dimer. Electron microscopy of thin sections of the MAP2-saturated microtubules fixed in the presence of tannic acid demonstrates a striking axial periodicity of 32 +/- 8 nm.  相似文献   

12.
Assembly properties of cod, bovine, and rat brain microtubules were compared. Estramustine phosphate, heparin, poly-L-aspartic acid, as well as NaCl, inhibited the assembly and disassembled both bovine and rat microtubules by inhibition of the binding between tubulin and MAPs. The assembly of cod brain microtubules was in contrast only marginally affected by these agents, in spite of a release of the MAPs. The results suggest that cod tubulin has a high intrinsic ability to assemble. This was confirmed by studies on phosphocellulose-purified cod tubulin, since the critical concentration for assembly was independent of the presence or absence of MAPs. The results show therefore that cod brain tubulin has, in contrast to bovine and rat brain tubulins, a high propensity to assembly under conditions which normally require the presence of MAPs. Even if cod MAPs, which have an unusual protein composition, were not needed for the assembly of cod microtubules, they were able to induce assembly of bovine brain tubulin. Both cod and bovine MAPs bound to cod microtubules, and bovine MAP1 and MAP2 bound to, and substituted at least the 400 kDa cod protein. This suggests that the tubulin-binding sites and the assembly-stimulatory ability of MAPs are common properties of MAPs from different species, independent of the tubulin assembly propensity.  相似文献   

13.
Mammalian neurofilaments prepared from brain and spinal cord by either of two methods partially inhibit the in vitro assembly of microtubules. This inhibition is shown to be due to the association of a complex of high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins (MAP1 and MAP2) and tubulin with the neurofilament. Further analysis of the association reveals a saturable binding of purified brain MAPs to purified neurofilaments with a Kd of 10(-7) M. Purified astroglial filaments neither inhibit microtubule assembly nor show significant binding of MAPs. It is proposed that the MAPs might function as one element in a network of intraorganellar links in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

14.
Promotion of MAP/MAP interaction by taxol   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The effects of taxol on microtubule-associated proteins of high molecular weight (MAPs) were studied in vitro. After negative staining, microtubules reconstituted in the presence of taxol from preparations of partially purified tubulin and MAPs, besides being bundled, displayed prominent elongated or globular extensions without apparent regularity. These extensions, but not the tubulin polymer, were heavily decorated after immuno-gold-labeling using antibodies to MAP-1 and MAP-2. Microtubules reconsituted in the absence of taxol showed a much more regular, and apparently helical, arrangement of MAPs along their surfaces. The formation of polymeric structures was also observed when preparation of MAPs free of tubulin were incubated with taxol. In this case in addition to large network-type aggregates with little apparent substructure, more regular structures seemingly consisting of approximately 5-nm-thick filaments arrayed in parallel were observed. Taxol-induced MAP aggregation occurred rapidly and was directly proportional to the concentration of protein, as revealed by optical density measurements. It is concluded that taxol, aside from promoting the assembly of tubulin and stabilizing microtubules, promotes MAP/MAP interaction.  相似文献   

15.
Cibacron blue was found to inhibit assembly and increase the critical concentration of microtubule proteins. In the presence of 4 mol Cibacron blue/mol tubulin, assembly was completely inhibited and pre-formed microtubules disassembled. Addition of 8% (v/v) dimethylsulfoxide to Cibacron blue-inhibited samples induced assembly of normal microtubules in addition to sheets of protofilaments. Disassembly was induced upon addition of 1 mM colchicine or 2mM Ca2+. No obvious difference was seen in the protein composition of these microtubules compared with controls. GTP exchange was not affected by the presence of Cibacron blue nor was GTP able to counteract its effect. This indicates that the exchangeable GTP site is not involved. The extent of assembly of phosphocellulose purified tubulin in the presence of 8% (v/v) dimethylsulfoxide was only slightly less in the presence of Cibacron blue, although the assembly rate was decreased. These results suggest that Cibacron blue might alter the binding of one or more of the associated proteins stimulating assembly.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Incorporation of GDP-tubulin during elongation of microtubules in vitro   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Removal of GDP from tubulin E-site is not obligatory for the in vitro assembly of microtubule protein in 0.5 mM GMPPCP. This assembly, which is significantly enhanced by glycerol, produces microtubules of normal morphology and with normal composition of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs). [3H]-GDP initially present at the E-site is shown to be incorporated directly into microtubules during assembly; this incorporation, maximally 60% of the assembled polymer, is dependent upon MAPs. These results are consistent with oligomeric species composed principally of GDP-tubulin plus MAPs, being incorporated directly into microtubules. The finding that stoichiometric GTP-tubulin formation is not an essential prerequisite for microtubule assembly may have important implications for the energetics of microtubule formation.  相似文献   

18.
A method is described for measuring the quantities of stable and dynamic microtubules in a population in vitro. The method exploits the tendency of dynamic microtubules to depolymerize rapidly after being sheared. Stable microtubules, such as those protected by microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), are broken to a smaller size by shearing, but do not depolymerize into subunits. The usual difficulty with this procedure is that the tubulin released from the dynamic microtubules rapidly repolymerizes before the end point of depolymerization can be measured. This has been overcome by including a small quantity of tubulin-colchicine complex in the mixture to block the repolymerization. For a total of 24 microM tubulin in a polymerization mixture, 10 microM of the sample polymerized originally under the conditions used. When 1.05 microM tubulin-colchicine complex was added at the time of shearing, the dynamic microtubules depolymerized, but the tubulin was released was unable to repolymerize and a small fraction of stable microtubules that resisted shear-induced depolymerization could then be detected. When traces of MAPs (0.23-2.8% by mass) were included in the tubulin mixture, the fraction of stable microtubules increased from 5% in the absence of added MAPs to 41% in the presence of 2.8% MAPs. All the MAPs in the mixture were found in the stable fraction and this stable fraction forms early during microtubule assembly. Calculations on the extent of enrichment of MAPs in the stable fraction indicated that as little as 4% MAPs in a microtubule protected it from shear-induced disassembly. The results suggest that low levels of MAPs may distribute nonrandomly in the microtubule population.  相似文献   

19.
The purified insulin receptor kinase catalyzed the phosphorylation of native tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs; MAP2, tau) on tyrosine residues. Insulin (10(-7) M) stimulated the reaction by 4-10-fold by increasing Vmax with little change in Km. alpha-Tubulin was preferred as a substrate for the kinase compared to beta-tubulin. MAP2 was found to be the best substrate among the cytoskeletal proteins tested; in the presence of insulin, the Vmax for MAP2 was 6.3 nmol/min/mg, its Km was 5.1 microM, and 1.7 mol of phosphate were incorporated per mol of MAP2. Under the same conditions used for this phosphorylation of tubulin and MAPs, actin and tropomyosin were very poorly phosphorylated. These data, coupled with previous evidence for potential functional relationships between insulin action and microtubules, raise the possibility that microtubule proteins may be cellular targets for the insulin receptor kinase.  相似文献   

20.
Microtubules exhibit dynamic instability, converting abruptly between assembly and disassembly with continued growth dependent on the presence of a tubulin-GTP cap at the plus end of the organelle. Tubulin, the main structural protein of microtubules, is a heterodimer composed of related polypeptides termed alpha-tubulin and beta-tubulin. Most eukaryotic cells possess several isoforms of the alpha- and beta-tubulins, as well as gamma-tubulin, an isoform restricted to the centrosome. The isoforms of tubulin arise either as the products of different genes or by posttranslational processes and their synthesis is subject to regulation. Tubulin isoforms coassemble with one another and isoform composition does not appear to determine whether a microtubule is able to carry out one particular activity or another. However, the posttranslational modification of polymerized tubulin may provide chemical signals which designate microtubules for a certain function. Microtubules interact with proteins called microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) and they can be divided into two groups. The structural MAPs stimulate tubulin assembly, enhance microtubule stability, and influence the spatial distribution of microtubules within cells. The dynamic MAPs take advantage of microtubule polarity and organization to vectorially translocate cellular components. The interactions between microtubules and MAPs contribute to the structural-functional integration that characterizes eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

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