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1.
B W Nagle  K H Doenges  J Bryan 《Cell》1977,12(3):573-586
Spontaneous microtubule assembly can be obtained in extracts from a variety of cultured cell lines by including glycerol in the assembly buffer. An analysis of the effects of cultured cell extracts on brain tubulin (neurotubulin) assembly has shown that the extracts contain initiation inhibitors whose effects are diminished by glycerol. By using glycerol during the assembly step, cultured cell tubulin can be purified by assembly-dissassembly procedures. The amount of glycerol necessary for significant spontaneous assembly varies from 1–6 M among the different cell lines and is dependent upon their content of inhibitor. Comparison of the assembly products obtained from NA, C6 and CHO cells at increasing glycerol concentrations shows that glycerol enhances the purification of tubulin and a polypeptide of molecular weight 49,000 daltons in all three systems. These preparations contain a number of other polypeptides, including a group with gel electrophoretic mobilities characteristic of tau-factor, but lack the high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) which are present in neurotubulin preparations. Phosphocellulose chromatography of NA tubulin removes several proteins from the tubulin and results in a loss of polymerizability. Among three proteins which are completely removed from the inactive tubulin, the most prominent is the 49K protein. This observation and the co-purification of the 49K protein with tubulin through two assembly-disassembly cycles suggest that it is a true MAP. The difference in MAP proteins between brain and tissue culture cells is parallelled by an absence of ring structures in NA tubulin preparations. NA tubulin, however, does form rings when brain MAPs are added. The early steps of NA tubulin assembly differ from those of neurotubulin; no rings are involved, and the first assembly intermediates are straight protofilament bundles. The differences between MAPs from cultured cells and brain and the absence of ring formation in NA tubulin preparations suggest that the assembly model based on neurotubulin is not completely general. A comparison of extracts from CHO cells grown with and without dibutyryl cAMP revealed no differences between the behavior of these extracts in spontaneous tubulin assembly or in mixture experiments with brain tubulin.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
T Fujii  R Tanaka 《Life sciences》1979,24(18):1683-1690
The interaction between actomyosin from rabbit skeletal muscle and microtubule proteins or 6S tubulin from rat brain was investigated with respect to the change in ATPase activity and physicochemical properties. Myosin bound to both microtubule proteins and 6S tubulin at low ionic strength. In the aggregates the molar ratio of microtubule proteins or 6S tubulin to myosin was 0.5–1.5 or 1.5–2.5. The superprecipitation of actomyosin was inhibited by 6S tubulin. The degree of superprecipitation inhibition was dependent on the mixing order of myosin, actin, 6S tubulin, and ATP. When myosin was preincubated first with 6S tubulin, the inhibition was most marked. The actin activation of myosin Mg-ATPase was inhibited by both microtubule proteins and 6S tubulin with stronger effects by the latter. The preincubation of myosin with 6S tubulin prior to the addition of actin induced not only greater inhibition of ATPase but also the binding of a larger quantity of 6S tubulin to myosin than the preincubation of myosin with actin. The similar results were obtained with microtubule proteins.  相似文献   

4.
The structural transitions occurring during the assembly and disassembly of pig brain microtubule protein were investigated by time-resolved X-ray scattering using synchrotron radiation. The reactions were introduced by a slow temperature scan (2 deg.C/min) from 0 °C to 37 °C and back. Several structurally distinct states could be resolved during one cycle of assembly/disassembly. During the temperature rise, one observes four main phases: prenucleation events, microtubule nucleation, growth, and postassembly events.Heating from 0 °C to 22 °C results in a biphasic breakdown of rings and other aggregates, while the apparent mean diameter increases from 38 to 41 nm. Parallel time-resolved electron microscopic observations suggest that the initial solution contains several types of aggregates, mostly double concentric and single rings, but also rod-like particles, clusters of rings and other aggregates. All of these tend to break down with increasing temperature. Double concentric rings seem to dissociate into large and small single rings before both types of rings break down into protofilament fragments and tubulin subunits. From the breakdown products, associations of several protofilament fragments are formed, which are important for initiating microtubule nucleation. Assembly of nuclei begins around 22 °C. Microtubule elongation takes place between 25 and 30 °C. They grow mainly by addition of tubulin subunits but not via rings.During the reverse temperature scan, microtubules shorten by the release of subunits and/or small protofilament fragments from their ends. The degree of disassembly is strongly increased below 22 °C. Below about 10 °C rings are reformed, probably from the fragments, but their final number is much less than initially.Conditions that prevent microtubule nucleation such as GDP or Ca2+ also stabilize rings, even at 37 °C. Thus, rings are viewed as storage aggregates of tubulin and microtubule associated proteins, whose breakdown is a prerequisite for microtubule formation, and whose reformation is independent of microtubule breakdown.The midpoints of microtubule growth and breakdown differ by about 12 deg.C so that the system shows hysteresis-like behavior. It is dependent on microtubule formation and is not seen when the temperature is cycled below that required for nucleation. Thus, even during a slow temperature scan, microtubule assembly is kinetically limited by nucleation. By contrast, depolymerization proceeds close to equilibrium.The radius of gyration of the tubulin heterodimers is 3.1 nm. The weight average diameter of rings in cold solutions is 38 nm, that of microtubules is 24.5 nm.At radiation dose rates of about 100 rad/s. radiation damage is of minor importance, as judged by the criterion of polymerizability. Total doses of up to 500,000 rad can be applied.Some concepts of analyzing time-resolved X-ray scattering data are presented. They make use of the fact that the scattering intensities vary continuously both with scattering angle and time. Cross-correlation of different regions of the pattern, and comparison of their temperature derivatives, reveals structural transitions not seen by other techniques.  相似文献   

5.
A H Lockwood 《Cell》1978,13(4):613-627
Cytoplasmic microtubule assembly from tubulin monomers requires an accessory protein or proteins present is isolated microtubules. These proteins have been designated "tau" factors. One such factor, tubulin assembly protein (TAP), has been purified to homogeneity from calf brain microtubules. A precipitating, monospecific antibody against the protein has been prepared. The antibody has been used to investigate the mechanism of TAP action in microtubule assembly and the distribution of TAP in cellular microtubules. Immunochemical, immunofluorescent and electron microscopic studies indicate that TAP functions stoichiometrically by binding physically to tubulin to form a complex active in microtubule assembly. TAP is an elongation protein which is required throughout the growth of a microtubule and which is actually present along the entire microtubule. Immunofluorescence microscopy has been used to demonstrate that TAP is distributed throughout the cytoplasmic microtubule network of cultured human, hamster and rat cells-both normal and virally transformed. Immunofluorescence of cells in mitosis shows that TAP is present in the mitotic spindle. These results demonstrate the biological importance of tubulin assembly protein and suggest that it or immunologically related "tau" proteins represent ubiquitous cofactors in cytoplasmic microtubule assembly.  相似文献   

6.
Microtubules from the cow adrenal cortex and brain were purified by three cycles of the temperature-dependent polymerization-depolymerization procedure. Whereas tubulin comprised approximately 8--10% of soluble brain protein, it comprised only 0.5-1.0% of the soluble adrenocortical protein. The partially purified tubulin from both sources gave similar results in the following studies: (1) [3H]colchicine binding examined by Scatchard analysis revealed an apparent Ka of 1 . 10(6) M-1 and a colchicine/tubulin molar binding ratio of 0.4-0.6; (2) tyrosylation studies using a specific tubulin-tyrosine ligase (which adds a tyrosine residue to the C-terminal glutamate or glutamine of the alpha-chain) in conjunction with carboxypeptidase A (which recovers the tyrosine) and (3) amino acid analysis. Examination of protein bands, in addition to the tubulin doublet of 55 000 molecular weight, on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a difference between the two tubulin preparations. The adrenocortical preparation had protein bands corresponding to apparent molecular weight of 36 000, 60 000, and 68 000. In contrast the brain preparation had only proteins of molecular weights greater than 200 000 (these bands were absent in all adrenal preparations). It would thus appear that if proteins which copurify with tubulin through repeated cycles of polymerization-depolymerization play a role in either microtubule formation or function there is a distinct difference between neural and non-neural tissue.  相似文献   

7.
The major 68,000-dalton protein present in cycled microtubule preparations from bovine brain can be isolated in a rapidly sedimenting fraction consisting of filaments 10 nm in diameter. This 68,000-dalton protein remains in the filament fraction after gel filtration, phosphocellulose chromatography, or salt extraction of microtubule protein. Microtubule protein devoid of 10-nm filaments contains ring structures under depolymerizing conditions, and it polymerizes into microtubules with a characteristically low critical concentration, although all of the 68,000-dalton protein has been removed from it. When cycled microtubule protein is subjected to chromatography on phosphocellulose, the tubulin fraction (PC-tubulin) assembles into microtubules only at concentrations greater than 2 mg/mL. The other fraction, eluted from phosphocellulose at high ionic strength, contains the major 68,000-dalton protein and can be further resolved into two components by centrifugation. The supernatant, which consists mainly of high molecular weight microtubule-associated proteins, stimulates low concentrations of PC-tubulin to assemble. The pellet contains all of the 68,000-dalton protein, consists of 10-nm filaments, and does not stimulate assembly of PC-tublin. Boiling of purified filaments, however, releases several proteins, including the 68,000-dalton protein, and these released proteins stimulate the assembly of PC-tubulin. The morphology and protein composition of the filaments isolated from microtubule preparations by these techniques are very similar to those of mammalian neurofilaments. These results suggest that the major 68,000-dalton protein in cycled microtubule preparations, which may correspond to tubulin assembly protein [Lockwood, A.H. (1978) Cell 13, 613--627], is a constituent of neurofilaments.  相似文献   

8.
The arrangement of the high molecular weight proteins associated with the walls of reconstituted mammalian brain microtubules has been investigated by electron microscopy of negatively stained preparations. The images are found to be consistent with an arrangement whereby the high molecular weight molecules are spaced 12 tubulin dimers apart, i.e., 960 A, along each protofilament of the microtubule, in agreement with the relative stoichiometry of tubulin and high molecular weight protein. Molecules on neighbouring protofilaments seem to be staggered so that they give rise to a helical superlattice, which can be superimposed on the underlying tubulin lattice. In micrographs of disintegrating tubules there is some indication of lateral interactions between neighbouring high molecular weight molecules. When the microtubules are depolymerized into a mixture of short spirals and rings, the high molecular weight proteins appear to remain attached to their respective protofilaments.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
A factor (33K protein) that modulates tubulin polymerization in vitro has been purified to homogeneity from porcine brain by ammonium sulfate fractionation and Whatman DE52, Toyo-pearl HW65C and Bio-Gel A 0.5 m column chromatographies. The purified fraction was free of nucleic acids and sugars. The activity of the purified 33K protein is pronase E sensitive but apparently heat- and trypsin-resistant though it undergoes tryptic digestion. The 33K protein inhibits polymerization of brain microtubule proteins in a dose-dependent manner and partially depolymerizes preformed microtubules. It also inhibits polymerization of purified starfish tubulin and microtubule elongation involving fragellar outer doublet microtubules and purified porcine brain tubulin. This suggests that the target of the 33K protein is tubulin rather than microtubule-associated proteins. The 33K protein causes incomplete depolymerization of microtubules and a new steady state is quickly attained which is apparently independent of microtubule mass concentration. Divalent cations such as calcium and magnesium do not modulate the inhibitory activity of the 33K protein.  相似文献   

11.
The polymerization of microtubule protein from beef brain is inefficient under the same conditions which are optimal for the assembly of microtubules isolated from hog brain (0.1 m piperazine-N,N′-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) buffer at pH 6.94). In examining the conditions required for microtubule polymerization in both beef brain extract and purified microtuble protein, it was determined that the pH optimum was pH 6.62 or 0.3 pH unit lower than the reported optimum for hog. Other assembly requirements (ionic strength, Mg2+ and nucleotide concentration, temperature) remained essentially the same as for hog. By separating and recombining fractions of tubulin and nontubulin components prepared from beef and hog microtubule protein, the requirement for the reduction in pH was found to be due to the tubulin and not to the microtubule-associated proteins. It was also determined that the efficiency of beef tubulin assembly, as measured by the yield of microtubule polymer, decreased rapidly after slaughter with a half-time of 19 min. Furthermore, when the overall efficiency of polymerization was reduced, the extent of assembly at each cycle of purification by disassembly and assembly was also observed to be depressed. The variations in the requirements for neuronal tubulin assembly in two closely related mammals suggest that the conditions required for assembly of microtubule protein in other tissues and cell types may also be different.  相似文献   

12.
The microtubule cytoskeleton consists of a highly organized network of microtubule polymers bound to their accessory proteins: microtubule-associated proteins, molecular motors, and microtubule-organizing proteins. The microtubule subunits are heterodimers composed of one alpha-tubulin polypeptide and one beta-tubulin polypeptide that should undergo a complex folding processing before they achieve a quaternary structure that will allow their incorporation into the polymer. Due to the extremely high protein concentration that exists at the cell cytoplasm, there are alpha- and beta-tubulin interacting proteins that prevent the unwanted interaction of these polypeptides with the surrounding protein pool during folding, thus allowing microtubule dynamics. Several years ago, the development of a nondenaturing electrophoretic technique made it possible to identify different tubulin intermediate complexes during tubulin biogenesis in vitro. By these means, the cytosolic chaperonin containing TCP-1 (CCT or TriC) and prefoldin have been demonstrated to intervene through tubulin and actin folding. Various other cofactors also identified along the alpha- and beta-tubulin postchaperonin folding route are now known to have additional roles in tubulin biogenesis such as participating in the synthesis, transport, and storage of alpha- and beta-tubulin. The future characterization of the tubulin-binding sites to these proteins, and perhaps other still unknown proteins, will help in the development of chemicals that could interfere with tubulin folding and thus modulating microtubule dynamics. In this paper, current knowledge of the above postchaperonin folding cofactors, which are in fact chaperones involved in tubulin heterodimer quaternary structure achievement, will be reviewed.  相似文献   

13.
Tubulin from the brine shrimp Artemia readily assembles in vitro in the absence of microtubule-associated proteins under conditions which do not permit assembly of tubulin from brain. Heated microtubule-associated protein preparations from bovine brain do, however, interact with Artemia tubulin, resulting in stimulation of tubulin assembly and formation of morphologically normal cold-sensitive microtubules. Addition of vinblastine to mixtures containing microtubules assembled in the presence of neural microtubule-associated proteins caused a drop and then a rise in turbidity of the solution. The turbidity changes were accompanied by the appearance of coils, presumably derived from the microtubules which disappeared upon addition of vinblastine. Coils also resulted when microtubule-associated proteins and vinblastine were added to tubulin before polymerization was initiated. Vinblastine prevented normal assembly and caused disruption of Artemia microtubules polymerized in the absence of microtubule-associated proteins. Under these conditions clumped or compact coils, different in appearance from those formed in the presence of the microtubule-associated proteins, were observed. The data confirm that tubulin from Artemia, an organism that is phylogenetically far removed from mammals, has retained binding sites for vinblastine and microtubule-associated proteins and that the interrelationship of these sites has been at least partially preserved. The incomplete depolymerization of Artemia microtubules in response to vinblastine when microtubule-associated proteins are absent suggests that the longitudinal tubulin-tubulin interactions involved in microtubule formation are more stable for Artemia than for neural tubulin.  相似文献   

14.
Electron microscopy has recently revealed striking structural orderliness in kinetochore proteins and protein complexes that associate with microtubules. In addition to their astonishing appearance and intrinsic beauty, the structures are functionally informative. The Dam1 and Ndc80 complexes bind to the microtubule lattice as rings and chevrons, respectively. These structures give insight into how the kinetochore couples to dynamic microtubules, a process crucial to the accurate segregation of chromosomes. HURP and kinesin-13 arrange tubulin into sleeves and bracelets surrounding the microtubule lattice. These structures might reflect the ability of these proteins to modulate microtubule dynamics by interacting with specialized tubulin configurations. In this review, we compare and contrast the structure of these proteins and their interactions with microtubules to illustrate how they attach to and modulate the dynamics of microtubules.  相似文献   

15.
Heterotrimeric G-proteins and their regulators are emerging as important players in modulating microtubule polymerization dynamics and in spindle force generation during cell division in C. elegans, D. melanogaster, and mammals. We recently demonstrated that RGS14 is required for completion of the first mitotic division of the mouse embryo, and that it regulates microtubule organization in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that RGS14 is a microtubule associated protein and a component of the mitotic spindle that may regulate microtubule polymerization and spindle organization. Taxol-stabilized tubulin, but not depolymerized tubulin co-immunoprecipitates with RGS14 from cell extracts. Furthermore, RGS14 co-purifies with tubulin from porcine brain following multiple rounds of microtubule polymerization/depolymerization and binds directly to microtubules formed in vitro from pure tubulin (KD=1.3 +/- 0.3 ?M). Both RGS14 and G?i1 in the presence of exogenous GTP promote tubulin polymerization, which is dependent on additional microtubule associated proteins. However, preincubation of RGS14 with G?i1-GDP precludes either from promoting microtubule polymerization, suggesting that a functional GTP/GDP cycle is necessary. Finally, we show that RGS14 is a component of mitotic asters formed in vitro from HeLa cell extracts and that depletion of RGS14 from cell extracts blocks aster formation. Collectively, these results show that RGS14 is a microtubule associated protein that may modulate microtubule dynamics and spindle formation.  相似文献   

16.
Cell extracts of myxamoebae of Physarum polycephalum have been prepared in such a way that they do not inhibit assembly of brain microtubule protein in vitro even at high extract-protein concentration. Co-polymers of these extracts and brain tubulin have been purified to constant stoichiometry and amoebal components identified by radiolabelling. Amoebal tubulin has been identified as having an alpha-subunit, mol.wt. 54 000, which co-migrates with brain alpha-tubulin and a beta-subunit, mol.wt. 50 000, which co-migrates with Tetrahymena ciliary beta-tubulin. Non-tubulin amoebal proteins that co-purify with tubulin during co-polymer formation have been shown to be essential for microtubule formation in the absence of glycerol and appear to be rather more effective than brain microtubule-associated proteins in stimulating assembly. The mitotic inhibitor griseofulvin (7-chloro-2',4,6-trimethoxy-6'-methylspiro[benzofuran-2(3H),1'-cyclohex-2'-ene] -3,4'-dione), which binds to brain microtubule-associated proteins and inhibits brain microtubule assembly in vitro, affected co-polymer microtubule protein in a similar way, but to a slightly greater extent.  相似文献   

17.
Considerable evidence both in vitro and in vivo implicates protein damage by peroxynitrite as a probable mechanism of cell death. Herein, we report that treatment of bovine brain microtubule protein, composed of tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins, with peroxynitrite led to a dose-dependent inhibition of microtubule polymerization. The extent of cysteine oxidation induced by peroxynitrite correlated well with inhibition of microtubule polymerization. Disulfide bonds between the subunits of the tubulin heterodimer were detected by Western blot as a result of peroxynitrite-induced cysteine oxidation. Addition of disulfide reducing agents including dithiothreitol and beta-mercaptoethanol restored a significant portion of the polymerization activity that was lost following peroxynitrite addition. Thus, peroxynitrite-induced disulfide bonds are at least partially responsible for the observed inhibition of polymerization. Sodium bicarbonate protected microtubule protein from the peroxynitrite-induced inhibition of polymerization. Tyrosine nitration of microtubule protein by 1 mM peroxynitrite increased approximately twofold when sodium bicarbonate was present whereas the extent of cysteine oxidation decreased from 7.5 to 6.3 mol cysteine/mol tubulin. These results indicate that cysteine oxidation of tubulin by peroxynitrite, rather than tyrosine nitration, is the primary mechanism of inhibition of microtubule polymerization.  相似文献   

18.
The association of brain tubulin, as measured by the temperature-dependent development of turbidity at 350 nm, is greatly stimulated by the detergent Nonidet P-40 in crude extracts of rat brain tissue. Stimulation of turbidity development is also obtained with partially purified rat brain tubulin treated with Nonidet or other detergents, or preincubated with phospholipase C or D; treatment with bovine pancreatic phospholipase A2 produces an inhibition. Exogenous phospholipids, diglycerides, other related derivatives, and lipophilic extracts of tubulin and brain supernatants can also alter the turbidity development. In addition, microtubules arising from tubulin obtained in the presence of Tween-20 or Nonidet P-40 exhibit a 50 and 100% increased specific viscosity, respectively, over that of tubulin prepared in the absence of detergent or in the presence of Kyro or Triton N-101. The effectiveness of these detergents in removing phospholipids from tubulin preparations follows a similar pattern: Nonidet P-40 removes 80%, Tween-20 removes 50%, and Kyro or Triton N-101 removes none. The total mass of microtubule formed, as determined by sedimentation, is the same regardless of the effect of the detergents on the viscosity. The microtubules obtained in the presence of Nonidet P-40 have a normal appearance when examined by electron microscopy, and their composition on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is indistinguishable from that of standard tubulin, especially with regard to the minor protein bands always present in the tubulin preparations. The results obtained suggest that the phospholipids associated to brain tubulin preparations might have a role in determining the association of tubulin and/or the final dimensions of the assembled microtubules.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Bovine brain microtubule protein, containing both tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins, undergoes ADP-ribosylation in the presence of [14C]NAD+ and a turkey erythrocyte mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase in vitro. The modification reaction could be demonstrated in crude brain tissue extracts where selective ADP-ribosylation of both the alpha and beta chains of tubulin and of the high molecular weight microtubule-associated protein MAP-2 occurred. In experiments with purified microtubule protein, tubulin dimer, the high molecular weight microtubule-associated protein MAP-2, and another high molecular weight mirotubule-associated protein which may be a MAP-1 species were heavily labeled. Tubulin and MAP-2 incorporated [14C]ADP-ribose to an average extent of approximately 2.4 and 30 mol of ADP-ribose/mol of protein, respectively. Assembly of microtubule protein into microtubules in vitro was inhibited by ADP-ribosylation, and incubation of assembled steady-state microtubules with ADP-ribosyltransferase and NAD+ resulted in rapid depolymerization of the microtubules. Thus, the eukaryotic enzyme can ADP-ribosylate tubulin and microtubule-associated proteins to much greater extents than previously observed with cholera and pertussis toxins, and the modification can significantly modulate microtubule assembly and disassembly.  相似文献   

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