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1.
Mechanism of the microtubule GTPase reaction   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The rate of GTP hydrolysis by microtubules has been measured at tubulin subunit concentrations where microtubules undergo net disassembly. This was made possible by using microtubules stabilized against disassembly by reaction with ethylene glycol bis-(succinimidylsuccinate) (EGS) as sites for the addition of tubulin-GTP subunits. The tubulin subunit concentration was varied from 25 to 90% of the steady state concentration, and there was no net elongation of stabilized microtubule seeds. The GTPase rate with EGS microtubules was linearly proportional to the tubulin-GTP subunit concentration when this concentration was varied by dilution and by using GDP to compete with GTP for the tubulin E-site. The linear dependence of the rate is consistent with a GTP mechanism in which hydrolysis is coupled to the tubulin-GTP subunit addition to microtubule ends. It is inconsistent with reaction schemes in which: microtubules are capped by a single tubulin-GTP subunit, which hydrolyzes GTP when a tubulin-GTP subunit adds to the end; hydrolysis occurs primarily in subunits at the interface of a tubulin-GTP cap and the tubulin-GDP microtubule core; hydrolysis is not coupled to subunit addition and occurs randomly in subunits in a tubulin-GTP cap. It was also found that GDP inhibition of the microtubule GTPase rate results from GDP competition for GTP at the tubulin subunit E-site. There is no additional effect of GDP on the GTPase rate resulting from exchange into tubulin subunits at microtubule ends.  相似文献   

2.
C M Lin  E Hamel 《Biochemistry》1987,26(22):7173-7182
We previously reported that direct incorporation of GDP (i.e., without an initial hydrolysis of GTP) into microtubules occurs throughout an assembly cycle in a constant proportion. The exact proportion varied with reaction conditions, becoming greater under all conditions in which tubulin-GDP increased relative to tubulin-GTP (low Mg2+ and GTP concentrations, high tubulin concentrations, and in the presence of exogenous GDP). These findings led us to explore further interrelationships of tubulin-GDP and tubulin-GTP in microtubule assembly. We have now determined the minimum amount of tubulin-GTP required for the initiation of microtubule assembly and the relative efficiency with which tubulin-GDP participates in microtubule elongation. When GTP, GDP, and tubulin concentrations were varied at a constant Mg2+ concentration (0.2 mM), initiation of assembly required that 35% of the nucleotide-bearing tubulin be in the form of tubulin-GTP, and incorporation of tubulin-GDP into microtubules during elongation was only 60% as efficient as would be predicted on the basis of its proportional concentration in the reaction mixtures. Very different results were obtained when the Mg2+ concentration was varied. Even though Mg2+ enhances the binding of GTP to tubulin (the equilibrium constant for the exchange of GTP for GDP was 0.2 in the absence of exogenous Mg2+, 3 with 0.2 mM Mg2+, 5 with 0.5 mM Mg2+, and 11 with 2 and 4 mM Mg2+), as Mg2+ was increased the proportion of tubulin-GTP required for the initiation of microtubule assembly rose greatly, and the direct incorporation of tubulin-GDP into microtubules during elongation became progressively more efficient. In the absence of exogenous Mg2+, only 20% tubulin-GTP was required for initiation, and tubulin-GDP was directly incorporated into microtubules half as efficiently as would be predicted on the basis of its concentration in the reaction mixture. At the highest Mg2+ concentration examined (4 mM), 80% tubulin-GTP was required for initiation of assembly, and tubulin-GDP was incorporated into microtubules as efficiently as tubulin-GTP.  相似文献   

3.
The assembly of pure tubulin dimer has been studied in two buffer systems (containing low and high glycerol/Mg), using a regeneration system protocol to assess the amount of GDP-tubulin in the assembling polymer. For both assembly systems studied, the GDP content is effectively stoichiometric with tubulin throughout assembly. This indicates a high degree of coupling between assembly and GTP-hydrolysis, giving a hydrolysis rate at least 10-fold faster than previously deduced. The steady state GTP hydrolysis rate is quantitatively consistent with this finding. We conclude that the extent of any GTP-tubulin cap is below the detectable limit, both during elongation and at steady state.  相似文献   

4.
Beryllium fluoride (BeF3-) has previously been shown to bind tightly to microtubules as a structural analogue of Pi and to mimic the GDP-Pi transient state in tubulin polymerization [Carlier, M.-F., Didry, D., Melki, R., Chabre, M., & Pantaloni, D. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 3555-3559]. The interaction of BeF3- with tubulin is analyzed here in greater detail. BeF3- binds to and dissociates from microtubule GDP subunits at very slow rates (k+ congruent to 100 M-1 s-1; k- congruent to 6 x 10(-4) s-1), suggesting that a slow conformation change of tubulin, linked to the stabilization of the microtubule structure, follows BeF3- binding. The possibility is evoked that BeF3- acts as a transition-state analogue in the GTPase reaction of tubulin. BeF3- does not bind to dimeric nor to oligomeric GDP-tubulin with high affinity. Substoichiometric binding of BeF3- to microtubules provides extensive stabilization of the structure. An original mechanistic model that accounts for the data is proposed. The kinetic parameters for microtubule elongation in the presence of GTP- and GDP-tubulin with and without BeF3- have been determined. Data support the following views: (i) Microtubules at steady state and in a regime of slow growth in the presence of GTP are stabilized by a cap of GDP-Pi subunits functionally similar to GDP-BeF3 subunits. (ii) In the presence of BeF3-, microtubules elongate from GDP-tubulin within the following sequence of reactions: initial nonproductive binding of GDP-tubulin to microtubule ends is followed by the binding of BeF3- and the associated conformation change allowing sustained elongation.  相似文献   

5.
A fluorescent derivative of paclitaxel, 3'-N-m-aminobenzamido-3'-N-debenzamidopaclitaxel (N-AB-PT), has been prepared in order to probe paclitaxel-microtubule interactions. Fluorescence spectroscopy was used to quantitatively assess the association of N-AB-PT with microtubules. N-AB-PT was found equipotent with paclitaxel in promoting microtubule polymerization. Paclitaxel and N-AB-PT underwent rapid exchange with each other on microtubules assembled from GTP-, GDP-, and GMPCPP-tubulin. The equilibrium binding parameters for N-AB-PT to microtubules assembled from GTP-tubulin were derived through fluorescence titration. N-AB-PT bound to two types of sites on microtubules (K(d1) = 61 +/- 7.0 nM and K(d2) = 3.3 +/- 0.54 microM). The stoichiometry of each site was less than one ligand per tubulin dimer in the microtubule (n(1) = 0.81 +/- 0.03 and n(2) = 0.44 +/- 0.02). The binding experiments were repeated after exchanging the GTP for GDP or for GMPCPP. It was found that N-AB-PT bound to a single site on microtubules assembled from GDP-tubulin with a dissociation constant of 2.5 +/- 0.29 microM, and that N-AB-PT bound to a single site on microtubules assembled from GMPCPP-tubulin with a dissociation constant of 15 +/- 4.0 nM. It therefore appears that microtubules contain two types of binding sites for paclitaxel and that the binding site affinity for paclitaxel depends on the nucleotide content of tubulin. It has been established that paclitaxel binding does not inhibit GTP hydrolysis and microtubules assembled from GTP-tubulin in the presence of paclitaxel contain almost exclusively GDP at the E-site. We propose that although all the subunits of the microtubule at steady state are the same "GDP-tubulin-paclitaxel", they are formed through two paths: paclitaxel binding to a tubulin subunit before its E-site GTP hydrolysis is of high affinity, and paclitaxel binding to a tubulin subunit containing hydrolyzed GDP at its E-site is of low affinity.  相似文献   

6.
In this paper we expand upon a previously reported observation of the effects of GDP on microtubule assembly. A ratio of GDP to GTP of ten (1 mm-GDP and 0.1 mm-GTP) is generally sufficient to completely block microtubule assembly, but only limited depolymerization is induced if GDP is added after assembly has reached a plateau in the presence of GTP. When added during polymerization, GDP arrests further elongation, and greater steady-state levels of assembly are obtained the later the time of addition of GDP. To explain this behavior we examined the rates of assembly and disassembly and the apparent critical concentration (C0) of tubulin in the presence of GDP. GDP-tubulin polymerizes very slowly as compared to GTP-tubulin, while depolymerization rates, as determined by dilution, are nearly identical in GTP and GDP. The C0 value calculated from the assembly and disassembly rates in GTP is within experimental error of the C0 value at steady-state determined directly. In the presence of GDP, however, the C0 value calculated from rate measurements is at least 60 times greater than that determined by equilibrium analysis. Our results indicate that the net assembly rate in GDP is not a valid measure of the reaction occurring at steady-state. A limited amount of depolymerization may occur upon addition of GDP to microtubules, and this appears to be due to a decrease in the fraction of protein able to participate in the polymerization reaction. The amount of tubulin “inactivated” by GDP is increased by the removal of microtubule-associated proteins. GDP-tubulin will stabilize existing microtubules, even when its polymerization cannot be demonstrated. These results are inconsistent with present models of microtubule assembly, and a new model involving co-operative interaction of microtubule-associated protein-tubulin oligomers at microtubule ends is proposed.  相似文献   

7.
Summary GTP hydrolysis associated with polymerization is a distinctive feature of microtubule assembly. This reaction may be fundamentally linked to the dynamic properties of microtubules in vivo. Kinetic analysis of the connection between microtubule assembly and associated GTP hydrolysis indicates that these two events are kinetically uncoupled, GTP hydrolysis occurring after tubulin incorporation in the microtubule. As a consequence, the combination of the diffusionnal incorporation of GTP in microtubules at steady-state and of subsequent GTP hydrolysis results in the formation of a steady-state GTP cap at microtubule ends. The interplay between GTP and GDP at microtubule ends is examined. Inhibition by GDP of steady-state GTP hydrolysis at microtubule ends and of microtubule elongation is understood within a tight reversible binding of GDP at microtubule ends generating inactive elongation sites. Nucleotides are freely exchangeable at microtubule ends. This result indicates that the nature of the nucleotide present at microtubule ends must be considered in a model for microtubule assembly.These data are pooled in order to define the general features of a model describing microtubule assembly and treadmilling in terms somewhat different from previously proposed models.  相似文献   

8.
E Hamel  J K Batra  C M Lin 《Biochemistry》1986,25(22):7054-7062
Using highly purified calf brain tubulin bearing [8-14C]guanosine 5'-diphosphate (GDP) in the exchangeable nucleotide site and heat-treated microtubule-associated proteins (both components containing negligible amounts of nucleoside diphosphate kinase and nonspecific phosphatase activities), we have found that a significant proportion of exchangeable-site GDP in microtubules can be incorporated directly during guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP) dependent polymerization of tubulin, without an initial exchange of GDP for GTP and subsequent GTP hydrolysis during assembly. The precise amount of GDP incorporated directly into microtubules is highly dependent on specific reaction conditions, being favored by high tubulin concentrations, low GTP and Mg2+ concentrations, and exogenous GDP in the reaction mixture. Minimum effects were observed with changes in reaction pH or temperature, changes in concentration of microtubule-associated proteins, alteration of the sulfonate buffer, or the presence of a calcium chelator in the reaction mixture. Under conditions most favorable for direct GDP incorporation, about one-third of the GDP in microtubules is incorporated directly (without GTP hydrolysis) and two-thirds is incorporated hydrolytically (as a consequence of GTP hydrolysis). Direct incorporation of GDP occurs in a constant proportion throughout elongation, and the amount of direct incorporation probably reflects the rapid equilibration of GDP and GTP at the exchangeable site that occurs before the onset of assembly.  相似文献   

9.
Hydrolysis of GTP is known to accompany microtubule assembly. Here we show that hydrolysis of GTP is also associated with the formation of linear oligomers of tubulin, which are precursors (prenuclei) in microtubule assembly. The hydrolysis of GTP on these linear oligomers inhibits the lateral association of GTP-tubulin that leads to the formation of a bidimensional lattice. Therefore GTP hydrolysis interferes with the nucleation of microtubules. Linear oligomers are also formed in mixtures of GTP-tubulin and GDP-tubulin. The hydrolysis of GTP associated with heterologous interactions between GTP-tubulin and GDP-tubulin in the cooligomer takes place at a threefold faster rate than upon homologous interactions between GTP-tubulins. The implication of these results in a model of vectorial GTP hydrolysis in microtubule assembly is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Microtubule growth proceeds through the endwise addition of nucleotide-bound tubulin dimers. The microtubule wall is composed of GDP-tubulin subunits, which are thought to come exclusively from the incorporation of GTP-tubulin complexes at microtubule ends followed by GTP hydrolysis within the polymer. The possibility of a direct GDP-tubulin incorporation into growing polymers is regarded as hardly compatible with recent structural data. Here, we have examined GTP-tubulin and GDP-tubulin incorporation into polymerizing microtubules using a minimal assembly system comprised of nucleotide-bound tubulin dimers, in the absence of free nucleotide. We find that GDP-tubulin complexes can efficiently co-polymerize with GTP-tubulin complexes during microtubule assembly. GDP-tubulin incorporation into microtubules occurs with similar efficiency during bulk microtubule assembly as during microtubule growth from seeds or centrosomes. Microtubules formed from GTP-tubulin/GDP-tubulin mixtures display altered microtubule dynamics, in particular a decreased shrinkage rate, apparently due to intrinsic modifications of the polymer disassembly properties. Thus, although microtubules polymerized from GTP-tubulin/GDP-tubulin mixtures or from homogeneous GTP-tubulin solutions are both composed of GDP-tubulin subunits, they have different dynamic properties, and this may reveal a novel form of microtubule “structural plasticity.”  相似文献   

11.
We investigated how the self-association of isolated tubulin dimers affects the rate of GTP hydrolysis and the equilibrium of nucleotide exchange. Both reactions are relevant for microtubule (MT) dynamics. We used HPLC to determine the concentrations of GDP and GTP and thereby the GTPase activity of SEC-eluted tubulin dimers in assembly buffer solution, free of glycerol and tubulin aggregates. When GTP hydrolysis was negligible, the nucleotide exchange mechanism was studied by determining the concentrations of tubulin-free and tubulin-bound GTP and GDP. We observed no GTP hydrolysis below the critical conditions for MT assembly (either below the critical tubulin concentration and/or at low temperature), despite the assembly of tubulin 1D curved oligomers and single-rings, showing that their assembly did not involve GTP hydrolysis. Under conditions enabling spontaneous slow MT assembly, a slow pseudo-first-order GTP hydrolysis kinetics was detected, limited by the rate of MT assembly. Cryo-TEM images showed that GTP-tubulin 1D oligomers were curved also at 36 °C. Nucleotide exchange depended on the total tubulin concentration and the molar ratio between tubulin-free GDP and GTP. We used a thermodynamic model of isodesmic tubulin self-association, terminated by the formation of tubulin single-rings to determine the molar fractions of dimers with exposed and buried nucleotide exchangeable sites (E-sites). Our analysis shows that the GDP to GTP exchange reaction equilibrium constant was an order-of-magnitude larger for tubulin dimers with exposed E-sites than for assembled dimers with buried E-sites. This conclusion may have implications on the dynamics at the tip of the MT plus end.  相似文献   

12.
The molecular basis of microtubule dynamic instability is controversial, but is thought to be related to a "GTP cap." A key prediction of the GTP cap model is that the proposed labile GDP-tubulin core will rapidly dissociate if the GTP-tubulin cap is lost. We have tested this prediction by using a UV microbeam to cut the ends from elongating microtubules. Phosphocellulose-purified tubulin was assembled onto the plus and minus ends of sea urchin flagellar axoneme fragments at 21-22 degrees C. The assembly dynamics of individual microtubules were recorded in real time using video microscopy. When the tip of an elongating plus end microtubule was cut off, the severed plus end microtubule always rapidly shortened back to the axoneme at the normal plus end rate. However, when the distal tip of an elongating minus end microtubule was cut off, no rapid shortening occurred. Instead, the severed minus end resumed elongation at the normal minus end rate. Our results show that some form of "stabilizing cap," possibly a GTP cap, governs the transition (catastrophe) from elongation to rapid shortening at the plus end. At the minus end, a simple GTP cap is not sufficient to explain the observed behavior unless UV induces immediate recapping of minus, but not plus, ends. Another possibility is that a second step, perhaps a structural transformation, is required in addition to GTP cap loss for rapid shortening to occur. This transformation would be favored at plus, but not minus ends, to account for the asymmetric behavior of the ends.  相似文献   

13.
Although the mechanism of microtubule dynamic instability is thought to involve the hydrolysis of tubulin-bound GTP, the mechanism of GTP hydrolysis and the basis of microtubule stability are controversial. Video microscopy of individual microtubules and dilution protocols were used to examine the size and lifetime of the stabilizing cap. Purified porcine brain tubulin (7-23 microM) was assembled at 37 degrees C onto both ends of isolated sea urchin axoneme fragments in a miniature flow cell to give a 10-fold variation in elongation rate. The tubulin concentration in the region of microtubule growth could be diluted rapidly (by 84% within 3 s of the onset of dilution). Upon perfusion with buffer containing no tubulin, microtubules experienced a catastrophe (conversion from elongation to rapid shortening) within 4-6 s on average after dilution to 16% of the initial concentration, independent of the predilution rate of elongation and length. Based on extrapolation of catastrophe frequency to zero tubulin concentration, the estimated lifetime of the stable cap after infinite dilution was less than 3-4 s for plus and minus ends, much shorter than the approximately 200 s observed at steady state (Walker, R. A., E. T. O'Brien, N. K. Pryer, M. Soboeiro, W. A. Voter, H. P. Erickson, and E. D. Salmon. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 107:1437-1448.). We conclude that during elongation, both plus and minus ends are stabilized by a short region (approximately 200 dimers or less) and that the size of the stable cap is independent of 10-fold variation in elongation rate. These results eliminate models of dynamic instability which predict extensive "build-up" stabilizing caps and support models which constrain the cap to the elongating tip. We propose that the cell may take advantage of such an assembly mechanism by using "catastrophe factors" that can promote frequent catastrophe even at high elongation rates by transiently binding to microtubule ends and briefly inhibiting GTP-tubulin association.  相似文献   

14.
Background: Microtubules polymerized from pure tubulin show the unusual property of dynamic instability, in which both growing and shrinking polymers coexist at steady state. Shortly after its addition to a microtubule end, a tubulin subunit hydrolyzes its bound GTP. Studies with non-hydrolyzable analogs have shown that GTP hydrolysis is not required for microtubule assembly, but is essential for generating a dynamic polymer, in which the subunits at the growing tip have bound GTP and those in the bulk of the polymer have bound GDP. It has been suggested that loss of the ‘GTP cap’ through dissociation or hydrolysis exposes the unstable GDP core, leading to rapid depolymerization. However, evidence for a stabilizing cap has been very difficult to obtain.Results We developed an assay to determine the minimum GTP cap necessary to stabilize a microtubule from shrinking. Assembly of a small number of subunits containing a slowly hydrolyzed GTP analog (GMPCPP) onto the end of dynamic microtubules stabilized the polymer to dilution. By labeling the subunits with rhodamine, we measured the size of the cap and found that as few as 40 subunits were sufficient to stabilize a microtubule.Conclusion On the basis of statistical arguments, in which the proportion of stabilized microtubules is compared to the probability that when 40 GMPCPP-tubulin subunits have polymerized onto a microtubule end, all protofilaments have added at least one GMPCPP-tubulin subunit, our measurements of cap size support a model in which a single GTP subunit at the end of each of the 13 protofilaments of a microtubule is sufficient for stabilization. Depolymerization of a microtubule may be initiated by an exposed tubulin–GDP subunit at even a single position. These results have implications for the structure of microtubules and their means of regulation.  相似文献   

15.
R J Stewart  K W Farrell  L Wilson 《Biochemistry》1990,29(27):6489-6498
The relationship between GTP hydrolysis and microtubule assembly has been investigated by using a rapid filtration method. Microtubules assembled from phosphocellulose-purified tubulin, double-labeled with [gamma-32P]- and [3H]GTP, were trapped and washed free of unbound nucleotide on glass fiber filters. The transient accumulation of microtubule-bound GTP predicted by uncoupled GTP hydrolysis models [Carlier & Pantaloni (1981) Biochemistry 20, 1918-1924; Carlier et al. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4428-4437] during the rapid assembly of microtubules was not detectable under our experimental conditions. By calculating hypothetical time courses for the transient accumulation of microtubule-bound GTP, we demonstrate that microtubule-bound GTP would have been detectable even if the first-order rate constant for GTP hydrolysis were 4-5 times greater than the pseudo-first-order rate constant for tubulin subunit addition to microtubules. In a similar manner, we demonstrate that if GTP hydrolysis were uncoupled from microtubule assembly but were limited to the interface between GTP subunits and GDP subunits (uncoupled vectorial hydrolysis), then microtubule-bound GTP would have been detectable if GTP hydrolysis became uncoupled from microtubule assembly at less than 50 microM free tubulin, 5 times the steady-state tubulin concentration of our experimental conditions. In addition, during rapid microtubule assembly, we have not detected any microtubule-bound Pi, which has been proposed to form a stabilizing cap at the ends of microtubules [Carlier et al. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 3555-3559]. Also, several conditions that could be expected to increase the degree of potential uncoupling between GTP hydrolysis and microtubule assembly were examined, and no evidence of uncoupling was found. Our results are consistent with models that propose cooperative mechanisms that limit GTP hydrolysis to the terminal ring of tubulin subunits [e.g., O'Brien et al. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 4148-4156]. The results are also consistent with the hypothesis that a slow conformational change in tubulin subunits after GTP hydrolysis and Pi release occurs that results in destabilized microtubule ends when such subunits become exposed at the ends.  相似文献   

16.
Microtubules are self-assembling polymers whose dynamics are essential for the normal function of cellular processes including chromosome separation and cytokinesis. Therefore understanding what factors effect microtubule growth is fundamental to our understanding of the control of microtubule based processes. An important factor that determines the status of a microtubule, whether it is growing or shrinking, is the length of the GTP tubulin microtubule cap. Here, we derive a Monte Carlo model of the assembly and disassembly of microtubules. We use thermodynamic laws to reduce the number of parameters of our model and, in particular, we take into account the contribution of water to the entropy of the system. We fit all parameters of the model from published experimental data using the GTP tubulin dimer attachment rate and the lateral and longitudinal binding energies of GTP and GDP tubulin dimers at both ends. Also we calculate and incorporate the GTP hydrolysis rate. We have applied our model and can mimic published experimental data, which formerly suggested a single layer GTP tubulin dimer microtubule cap, to show that these data demonstrate that the GTP cap can fluctuate and can be several microns long.  相似文献   

17.
Effects of pH on tubulin-nucleotide interactions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Significant GTP-independent, temperature-dependent turbidity development occurs with purified tubulin stored in the absence of unbound nucleotide, and this can be minimized with a higher reaction pH. Since microtubule assembly is optimal at lower pH values, we examined pH effects on tubulin-nucleotide interactions. While the lowest concentration of GTP required for assembly changed little, GDP was more inhibitory at higher pH values. The amounts of exogenous GTP bound to tubulin at all pH values were similar, but the amounts of exogenous GDP bound and endogenous GDP (i.e., GDP originally bound in the exchangeable site) retained by tubulin rose as reaction pH increased. Endogenous GDP was more efficiently displaced by exogenous GTP than GDP at all pH values, but displacement by GTP was 10-15% greater at pH 6 than at pH 7. Dissociation constants for GDP and GTP were about 1.0 microM at pH 6 and 0.02 microM at pH 7. A small increase in the affinity of GDP relative to that of GTP occurs at pH 7 as compared to pH 6, together with a 50-fold absolute increase in the affinity of both nucleotides for tubulin at pH 7. The time courses of microtubule assembly and GTP hydrolysis were compared at pH 6 and pH 7. At pH 6, the two reactions were simultaneous in onset and initially stoichiometric. At pH 7, although the reactions began simultaneously, hydrolysis seemed to lag substantially behind assembly. Unhydrolyzed radiolabeled GTP was not incorporated into microtubules, however, indicating that GTP hydrolysis is actually closely coupled to assembly. The apparent lag in hydrolysis probably results from a methodological artifact rather than incorporation of GTP into the microtubule with delayed hydrolysis.  相似文献   

18.
Effects of magnesium on the dynamic instability of individual microtubules   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
We investigated the effect of magnesium ion (Mg) on the parameters of dynamic instability of individual porcine brain microtubules. Rates of elongation and rapid shortening were measured by using video-enhanced DIC light microscopy and evaluated by using computer-generated plots of microtubule length vs time. Increasing [Mg] from 0.25 to 6 mM increased the second-order association rate constant for elongation about 25% at each end. At plus ends, this resulted in a 1.5-2-fold increase in elongation rates over the tubulin concentrations explored. Rapid shortening rates were more dramatically affected by Mg. As [Mg] was increased from 0.25 to 6 mM, the average rate of rapid shortening increased about 3-fold at plus ends and 4-5-fold at minus ends. The ends had roughly equivalent average rates at low [Mg], of 30-45 microns/min. At any Mg concentration, rates of disassembly varied from one microtubule to another, and often an individual microtubule would exhibit more than one rate during a single shortening phase. Individual rates at 6 mM Mg varied from 12 to 250 microns/min. Over the concentration range explored, Mg affected the frequencies of transition from elongation to shortening and back only at minus ends. Minus ends were relatively stable at low [Mg], having 4 times the frequency of rescue than at high [Mg], and a lower frequency of catastrophe (particularly evident at low tubulin concentrations). Plus ends, surprisingly, were highly unstable at all Mg concentrations investigated, having about the same transition frequencies as did the least stable (high Mg) minus ends. Our results have implications for models of the GTP cap, again emphasizing that GTP caps cannot build up in proportion to elongation rate, and must be constrained to the tips of growing microtubules.  相似文献   

19.
On and Around Microtubules: An Overview   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microtubules are hollow tubes some 25 nm in diameter participating in the eukaryotic cytoskeleton. They are built from αβ-tubulin heterodimers that associate to form protofilaments running lengthwise along the microtubule wall with the β-tubulin subunit facing the microtubule plus end conferring a structural polarity. The α- and β-tubulins are highly conserved. A third member of the tubulin family, γ-tubulin, plays a role in microtubule nucleation and assembly. Other members of the tubulin family appear to be involved in microtubule nucleation. Microtubule assembly is accompanied by hydrolysis of GTP associated with β-tubulin so that microtubules consist principally of ‘GDP-tubulin’ stabilized at the plus end by a short ‘cap’. An important property of microtubules is dynamic instability characterized by growth randomly interrupted by pauses and shrinkage. Many proteins interact with microtubules within the cell and are involved in essential functions such as microtubule growth, stabilization, destabilization, and interactions with chromosomes during cell division. The motor proteins kinesin and dynein use microtubules as pathways for transport and are also involved in cell division. Crystallography and electron microscopy are providing a structural basis for understanding the interactions of microtubules with antimitotic drugs, with motor proteins and with plus end tracking proteins.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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