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 31 毫秒
1.
Tau is a family of closely related proteins (55,000-62,000 mol wt) which are contained in the nerve cells and copolymerize with tubulin to induce the formation of microtubules in vitro. All information so far has indicated that tau is closely apposed to the microtubule lattice, and there was no indication of domains projecting from the microtubule polymer lattice. We have studied the molecular structure of the tau factor and its mode of binding on microtubules using the quick-freeze, deep-etch method (QF.DE) and low angle rotary shadowing technique. Phosphocellulose column-purified tubulin from porcine brain was polymerized with tau and the centrifuged pellets were processed by QF.DE. We observed periodic armlike elements (18.7 +/- 4.8 nm long) projecting from the microtubule surface. Most of the projections appeared to cross-link adjacent microtubules. We measured the longitudinal periodicity of tau projections on the microtubules and found it to match the 6-dimer pattern better than the 12-dimer pattern. The stoichiometry of tau versus tubulin in preparations of tau saturated microtubules was 1:approximately 5.0 (molar ratio). Tau molecules adsorbed on mica took on rodlike forms (56.1 +/- 14.1 nm long). Although both tau and MAP1 are contained in axons, competitive binding studies demonstrated that the binding sites of tau and MAP1A on the microtubule surfaces are most distinct, although they may partially overlap.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
MAP2 and tau exhibit microtubule-stabilizing activities that are implicated in the development and maintenance of neuronal axons and dendrites. The proteins share a homologous COOH-terminal domain, composed of three or four microtubule binding repeats separated by inter-repeats (IRs). To investigate how MAP2 and tau stabilize microtubules, we calculated 3D maps of microtubules fully decorated with MAP2c or tau using cryo-EM and helical image analysis. Comparing these maps with an undecorated microtubule map revealed additional densities along protofilament ridges on the microtubule exterior, indicating that MAP2c and tau form an ordered structure when they bind microtubules. Localization of undecagold attached to the second IR of MAP2c showed that IRs also lie along the ridges, not between protofilaments. The densities attributable to the microtubule-associated proteins lie in close proximity to helices 11 and 12 and the COOH terminus of tubulin. Our data further suggest that the evolutionarily maintained differences observed in the repeat domain may be important for the specific targeting of different repeats to either alpha or beta tubulin. These results provide strong evidence suggesting that MAP2c and tau stabilize microtubules by binding along individual protofilaments, possibly by bridging the tubulin interfaces.  相似文献   

4.
A heat-stable microtubule-associated protein (MAP) with relative molecular mass 250 000, termed 250-kDa MAP, was purified from bovine adrenal cortex. It is classified as a MAP subspecies distinct from MAP1, MAP2, tau, and MAP4, as judged from its electrophoretic mobility, heat stability and immunoreactivity. Purified 250-kDa MAP was able to bind to taxol-stabilized microtubules, although it lacked the ability to polymerize purified tubulin into microtubules. Western-blot analysis showed that this MAP was expressed ubiquitously in mammalian tissues. Immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that polyclonal antibodies raised against 250-kDa MAP stained many punctate structures in the cytoplasm of cultured cells. Blurry cytosolic staining was also observed. Judging from the result of nocodazole treatment, the punctate structures were associated with the microtubule network throughout the cytoplasm, while cytosolic 250-kDa MAP colocalized with free tubulin. Under electron microscopy, 250-kDa MAP has the appearance of a hollow sphere of about 12 nm diameter.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
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   

7.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,126(4):1017-1029
To study the effects of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) on in vivo microtubule assembly, cDNAs containing the complete coding sequences of a Drosophila 205-kD heat stable MAP, human MAP 4, and human tau were stably transfected into CHO cells. Constitutive expression of the transfected genes was low in most cases and had no obvious effects on the viability of the transfected cell lines. High levels of expression, as judged by Western blots, immunofluorescence, and Northern blots, could be induced by treating cells with sodium butyrate. High levels of MAPs were maintained for at least 24-48 h after removal of the sodium butyrate. Immunofluorescence analysis indicated that all three MAPs bound to cellular microtubules, but only the transfected tau caused a rearrangement of microtubules into bundles. Despite high levels of expression of these exogenous MAPs and the bundling of microtubules in cells expressing tau, transfected cells had normal levels of assembled and unassembled tubulin. With the exception of the tau-induced bundles, microtubules in transfected cells showed the same sensitivity as control cells to microtubule depolymerization by Colcemid. Further, all three MAPs were ineffective in reversing the taxol-dependent phenotype of a CHO mutant cell line. The absence of a quantitative effect of any of these heterologous proteins on the assembly of tubulin suggests that these MAPs may have different roles in vivo from those inferred previously from in vitro experiments.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
In this paper, we report on the effect of brain microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) on the dynamic instability of microtubules as well as on the nucleation activity of purified centrosomes. Under our experimental conditions, tau and MAP2 have similar effects on microtubule nucleation and dynamic instability. Tau increases the apparent elongation rate of microtubules in proportion to its molar ratio to tubulin, and we present evidence indicating that this is due to a reduction of microtubule instability rather than to an increase of the on rate of tubulin subunits at the end of growing microtubules. Increasing the molar ratio of tau over tubulin leads also to an increase in the average number of microtubules nucleated per centrosome. This number remains constant with time. This suggests that the number of centrosome-nucleated microtubules at steady state can be determined by factors that are not necessarily irreversibly bound to centrosomes but, rather, affect the dynamic properties of microtubules.  相似文献   

10.
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   

11.
Tubulin, the major constituent protein of microtubules, is a heterodimer of alpha and beta subunits. Both alpha and beta exist in multiple isotypic forms. It is not clear if different isotypes perform different functions. In order to approach this question, we have made a monoclonal antibody specific for the beta III isotype of tubulin. This particular isotype is neuron-specific and appears to be phosphorylated near the C terminus. We have used immunoaffinity depletion chromatography to prepare tubulin lacking the beta III subunit. We find that removal of the beta III isotype results in a tubulin mixture able to assemble much more rapidly than is unfractionated tubulin when reconstituted with either of the two microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), tau or MAP 2. Our results suggest that the different isotypes of tubulin differ from each other in their ability to polymerize into microtubules. We have also found that the anti-beta III antibody can stimulate microtubule assembly when reconstituted with tubulin and either tau or MAP 2. When reconstituted with tubulin lacking the beta III isotype, the antibody causes the tubulin to polymerize into a polymer that is a microtubule in the presence of MAP 2 and a ribbon in the presence of tau.  相似文献   

12.
A comparison was made of cytosynalin- and MAPs-induced microtubule formation. Cytosynalin (a 35 kDa cytoskeleton-interacting and calmodulin-binding protein) facilitated more rapid and extensive microtubule formation than MAPs. Electron microscopic examination revealed that the cytosynalin-induced microtubules were 24 nm tubules surrounded by a periodic nap structure along their length. Consequently, the apparent diameter of microtubules was seen as 34 nm. Cytosynalin maximally bound to tubulin dimer at a molar ratio of 1:1. The effect of cytosynalin on the microtubule formation was found to be more potent than that of MAP2 or tau factor as determined by electron microscopy and cosedimentation assay.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The aggregation of PrPSc is thought to be crucial for the neuropathology of prion diseases. A growing body of evidence demonstrates that the perturbation of the microtubule network contributes to PrPSc-mediated neurodegeneration. Microtubules are a component of the cytoskeleton and play a central role in organelle transport, axonal elongation and cellular architecture in neurons. The polymerization, stabilization, arrangement of microtubules can be modulated by interactions with a series of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs). Recent studies have proposed the abnormal alterations of two major microtubule-associated proteins, tau and MAP2, in the brain tissues of naturally occurred and experimental human and animal prion diseases. Increased total tau protein and hyperphosphorylation of tau at multiple residues are observed at the terminal stage of prion disease. The abnormal aggregation of tau protein disturbs its binding ability to microtubules and affects the microtubule dynamic. Significantly downregulated MAP2 is detected in the brain tissues of scrapie-infected hamsters and PrP106–126 treated cells, which corresponds well with the remarkably low levels of tubulin. In conclusion, dysfunction of MAP2/tau family leads to disruption of microtubule structure and impairment of axonal transport, and eventually triggers apoptosis in neurons, which becomes an essential pathway for prion to induce the neuropathology.  相似文献   

15.
《朊病毒》2013,7(4):334-338
The aggregation of PrPSc is thought to be crucial for the neuropathology of prion diseases. A growing body of evidence demonstrates that the perturbation of the microtubule network contributes to PrPSc-mediated neurodegeneration. Microtubules are a component of the cytoskeleton and play a central role in organelle transport, axonal elongation and cellular architecture in neurons. The polymerization, stabilization, arrangement of microtubules can be modulated by interactions with a series of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs). Recent studies have proposed the abnormal alterations of two major microtubule-associated proteins, tau and MAP2, in the brain tissues of naturally occurred and experimental human and animal prion diseases. Increased total tau protein and hyperphosphorylation of tau at multiple residues are observed at the terminal stage of prion disease. The abnormal aggregation of tau protein disturbs its binding ability to microtubules and affects the microtubule dynamic. Significantly downregulated MAP2 is detected in the brain tissues of scrapie-infected hamsters and PrP106–126 treated cells, which corresponds well with the remarkably low levels of tubulin. In conclusion, dysfunction of MAP2/tau family leads to disruption of microtubule structure and impairment of axonal transport, and eventually triggers apoptosis in neurons, which becomes an essential pathway for prion to induce the neuropathology.  相似文献   

16.
To understand microtubule function the factors regulating their spatial organization and their interaction with cellular organelles, including other microtubules, must be elucidated. Many proteins are implicated in these organizational events and the known consequences of their actions within the cell are increasing. For example, the function of microtubule bundles at the surfaces of polarized cells has recently received attention, as has the action in cortical rotation of a transient arrangement of microtubules found beneath the vegetal surface of fertilized frog eggs. The in vivo association of microtubules during early Xenopus oogenesis has added interest as microtubules bundled in cell-free extracts are protected against the action of a severing protein found in this animal. A 52 kDa F-actin bundling protein purified from Physarum polycephalum organizes microtubules and causes the cobundling of microtubules and microfilaments. These observations, in concert with others that are presented, emphasize the diversity within the family of microtubule cross-linking proteins. The challenge is to determine which proteins are relevant from a physiological perspective, to ascertain their molecular mechanisms of action and to describe how they affect cytoplasmic organization and cell function. To realize this objective, the proteins which cross-link and bundle microtubules must be investigated by techniques which reveal different but related aspects of their properties. Cloning and sequencing of genes for cross-linking proteins, their subcellular localization especially as microtubule-related changes in cell morphology are occurring and the application of genetic studies are necessary. Study of the neural MAP provides the best example of just how powerful current experimental approaches are and at the same time shows their limits. The neural MAP have long been noted for their enhancement of tubulin assembly and microtubule stability. Their spatial distribution has been studied during the morphogenesis of neural cells. Sequencing of cloned genes has revealed the functional domains of neural MAP including carboxy-terminal microtubule-binding sites. Similarities to microtubule binding proteins from other cell types stimulate interest in the neural MAP and further suggest their importance in microtubule organization. For example, MAP4 enjoys a wide cellular distribution and has microtubule-binding sequences very similar to those in the neural MAP. Moreover, the nontubulin proteins of marginal bands are immunologically related to neural MAP, indicating shared structural/functional domains. Even with these findings the mechanism by which neural MAP cross-link microtubules remains uncertain. Indeed, some researchers express doubt that microtubule cross-linking is actually a function of neural MAP in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The knowledge of higher plant microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) remains limited to a few examples that illustrate essentially their binding properties to preformed microtubules as described in carrots. Using taxol-stabilized microtubules a putative MAP-enriched fraction has been isolated in maize cultured cell extracts, one of these polypeptides is immunologically related to neural tau. At present, these proteins are being characterized by co-assembly assays that were not possible before. Similar experiments were done also in a heterologous system using brain tubulin. Three polypeptides out of seven that constituted the MAP fraction were found to co-assemble specifically with tubulin subunits of both origins. Their apparent molecular weights are 67, 83 and 125 kDa. A two-dimensional gel immunoblot of the 83 kDa polypeptide with tau antibodies revealed one major spot. Polypeptides were quantiated by scanning the gels. These results shed light on the present debate on higher plant MAPs and their potential activity in the regulation of microtubule assembly and function in the higher plant cell.  相似文献   

19.
A heat-stable microtubule-associated protein (MAP) with molecular weight of 190,000, termed 190-kD MAP, was purified from bovine adrenal cortex. This MAP showed the same level of ability to promote tubulin polymerization as did MAP2 and tau from mammalian brains. Relatively high amounts of 190-kD MAP could bind to microtubules reconstituted in the presence of taxol. At maximum 1 mol of 190-kD MAP could bind to 2.3 mol of tubulin. 190-kD MAP was phosphorylated by a cAMP-dependent protein kinase prepared from sea urchin spermatozoa and by protein kinase(s) present in the microtubule protein fraction prepared from mammalian brains. The maximal numbers of incorporated phosphate were approximately 0.2 and approximately 0.4 mol per mole of 190-kD MAP, respectively. These values were lower than that of MAP2, which could be heavily phosphorylated by the endogenous protein kinase(s) up to 5 mol per mole of MAP2 under the same assay condition. 190-kD MAP had no effects on the low-shear viscosity of actin and did not induce an increase in turbidity of the actin solution. It was also revealed that 190-kD MAP does not cosediment with actin filaments. These data clearly show that, distinct from MAP2 and tau, this MAP does not interact with actin. Electron microscopic observation of the rotary-shadowed images of 190-kD MAP showed the molecular shape to be a long, thin, flexible rod with a contour length of approximately 100 nm. Quick-freeze, deep-etch replicas of the microtubules reconstituted from 190-kD MAP and brain tubulin revealed many cross-bridges connecting microtubules with each other.  相似文献   

20.
STOP proteins     
Bosc C  Andrieux A  Job D 《Biochemistry》2003,42(42):12125-12132
Microtubules assembled from purified tubulin in vitro are labile, rapidly disassembling when exposed to a variety of depolymerizing conditions such as cold temperature. In contrast, in many cell types, microtubules seem to be unaffected when the cell is exposed to the cold. This resistance of microtubules to the cold has been intriguing because the earliest and by far most studied microtubule-associated proteins such as MAP2 and tau are devoid of microtubule cold stabilizing activity. Over the past several years, it has been shown that resistance of microtubules to the cold is largely due to polymer association with a class of microtubule-associated proteins called STOPs. STOPs are calmodulin-binding and calmodulin-regulated proteins which, in mammals, are encoded by a single gene but exhibit substantial cell specific variability due to mRNA splicing and alternative promoter use. STOP microtubule stabilizing activity has been ascribed to two classes of new bifunctional calmodulin- and microtubule-binding motifs, with distinct microtubule binding properties in vivo. STOPs seem to be restricted to vertebrates and are composed of a conserved domain split by the apparent insertion of variable sequences that are completely unrelated among species. Recently, STOP suppression in mice has been found to induce synaptic defects associated with neuroleptic-sensitive behavioral disorders. Thus, STOPs are important for synaptic plasticity. Additionally, STOP-deficient mice may yield a pertinent model for the study of neuroleptics in illnesses such as schizophrenia, currently thought to result from defects in synapse function.  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