Traces of brain microtubule-associated proteins affect dynamic properties of microtubules

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (10) ◽  
pp. 1202-1209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. B. Keates

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

1980 ◽  
Vol 189 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Roobol ◽  
C I Pogson ◽  
K Gull

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.


1984 ◽  
Vol 62 (9) ◽  
pp. 803-813 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. B. Keates

Preparation of microtubule protein in the presence or absence of glycerol results in differences in polymerization properties and content of microtubule associated proteins. The variation in properties appears to result from the reduced proportion of microtubule associated proteins in preparations made with glycerol. I have used the colchicine binding assay to monitor recovery of active tubulin and have found that a single factor can account for the difference. During the in vitro assembly of microtubules from the crude brain homogenate, glycerol promotes polymerization of the bulk of the tubulin, while less than half is incorporated into microtubules in the absence of glycerol. Assembly of partly purified microtubule protein is not enhanced by glycerol however. Microtubule associated proteins present in the crude homogenate are almost completely incorporated into the microtubules regardless of the presence of glycerol, and their high content in glycerol-free preparations appears to be the trivial result of low tubulin recovery. The high affinity of microtubule associated proteins for the assembled microtubules has other consequences for in vitro studies of microtubule assembly, and critical concentration plots to determine the polymerization equilibrium constant can be distorted unless the preparation used has a high content of microtubule associated proteins.


1992 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Barnes ◽  
K A Louie ◽  
D Botstein

Conditions were established for the self-assembly of milligram amounts of purified Saccharomyces cerevisiae tubulin. Microtubules assembled with pure yeast tubulin were not stabilized by taxol; hybrid microtubules containing substoichiometric amounts of bovine tubulin were stabilized. Yeast microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) were identified on affinity matrices made from hybrid and all-bovine microtubules. About 25 yeast MAPs were isolated. The amino-terminal sequences of several of these were determined: three were known metabolic enzymes, two were GTP-binding proteins (including the product of the SAR1 gene), and three were novel proteins not found in sequence databases. Affinity-purified antisera were generated against synthetic peptides corresponding to two of the apparently novel proteins (38 and 50 kDa). Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that both these proteins colocalize with intra- and extranuclear microtubules in vivo.


1982 ◽  
Vol 95 (3) ◽  
pp. 982-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
J F Leterrier ◽  
R K Liem ◽  
M L Shelanski

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


1990 ◽  
Vol 110 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
H N Baker ◽  
S W Rothwell ◽  
W A Grasser ◽  
K T Wallis ◽  
D B Murphy

Cells contain multiple tubulin isotypes that are the products of different genes and posttranslational modifications. It has been proposed that tubulin isotypes become segregated into different classes of microtubules each adapted to specific activities and functions. To determine if mixtures of tubulin isotypes segregate into different classes of polymers in vitro, we used immunoelectron microscopy to examine the composition of microtubule copolymers that assembled from mixtures of purified tubulin subunits from chicken brain and erythrocytes, each of which has been shown to exhibit distinct assembly properties in vitro. We observed that (a) the two isotypes coassemble rapidly and efficiently despite the fact that each isotype exhibits its own unique biochemical and assembly properties; (b) at low monomer concentrations the ratio of tubulin isotypes changes along the lengths of elongating copolymers resulting in gradients in immuno-gold labeling; (c) two distinct classes of copolymers each containing a distinct ratio of isotypes assemble simultaneously in the same subunit mixture; and (d) subunits and polymers of different isotypes associate nearly equally well with each other, there being only a slight bias favoring interactions among subunits and polymers of the same isotype. The observations agree with previous studies on the homogeneous distribution of multiple isotypes within cells and suggest that if segregation of isotypes does occur in vivo, it is most likely directed by cell-specific microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) or specialized intracellular conditions.


1979 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. 266-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Kim ◽  
L I Binder ◽  
J L Rosenbaum

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.


2002 ◽  
Vol 115 (7) ◽  
pp. 1345-1354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey O. Wasteneys

Plant microtubule arrays differ fundamentally from their animal, fungal and protistan counterparts. These differences largely reflect the requirements of plant composite polymer cell walls and probably also relate to the acquisition of chloroplasts. Plant microtubules are usually dispersed and lack conspicuous organizing centres. The key to understanding this dispersed nature is the identification of proteins that interact with and regulate the spatial and dynamic properties of microtubules. Over the past decade, a number of these proteins have been uncovered, including numerous kinesin-related proteins and a 65 kDa class of structural microtubule-associated proteins that appear to be unique to plants. Mutational analysis has identified MOR1, a probable stabilizer of microtubules that is a homologue of the TOGp-XMAP215 class of high-molecular-weight microtubule-associated proteins, and a katanin p60 subunit homologue implicated in the severing of microtubules. The identification of these two proteins provides new insights into the mechanisms controlling microtubule assembly and dynamics, particularly in the dispersed cortical array found in highly polarized plant cells.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document