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1.
Nature ; 446(7138): 921-5, 2007 Apr 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17443186

RESUMO

Eukaryotic cells rely on a surveillance mechanism known as the spindle checkpoint to ensure accurate chromosome segregation. The spindle checkpoint prevents sister chromatids from separating until all kinetochores achieve bipolar attachments to the mitotic spindle. Checkpoint proteins tightly inhibit the anaphase-promoting complex (APC), a ubiquitin ligase required for chromosome segregation and progression to anaphase. Unattached kinetochores promote the binding of checkpoint proteins Mad2 and BubR1 to the APC-activator Cdc20, rendering it unable to activate APC. Once all kinetochores are properly attached, however, cells inactivate the checkpoint within minutes, allowing for the rapid and synchronous segregation of chromosomes. How cells switch from strong APC inhibition before kinetochore attachment to rapid APC activation once attachment is complete remains a mystery. Here we show that checkpoint inactivation is an energy-consuming process involving APC-dependent multi-ubiquitination. Multi-ubiquitination by APC leads to the dissociation of Mad2 and BubR1 from Cdc20, a process that is reversed by a Cdc20-directed de-ubiquitinating enzyme. The mutual regulation between checkpoint proteins and APC leaves the cell poised for rapid checkpoint inactivation and ensures that chromosome segregation promptly follows the completion of kinetochore attachment. In addition, our results suggest a mechanistic basis for how cancer cells can have a compromised spindle checkpoint without corresponding mutations in checkpoint genes.


Assuntos
Fuso Acromático/metabolismo , Complexos Ubiquitina-Proteína Ligase/metabolismo , Ubiquitina/metabolismo , Ciclossomo-Complexo Promotor de Anáfase , Segregação de Cromossomos , Células HeLa , Humanos , Cinetocoros/efeitos dos fármacos , Cinetocoros/metabolismo , Nocodazol/farmacologia , Fuso Acromático/efeitos dos fármacos , Enzimas de Conjugação de Ubiquitina/genética , Enzimas de Conjugação de Ubiquitina/metabolismo
2.
Dev Cell ; 1(4): 553-65, 2001 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11703945

RESUMO

Vertebrate hairy genes are expressed in patterns thought to be readouts of a "segmentation clock" in the presomitic mesoderm. Here we use transgenic Xenopus embryos to show that two types of regulatory elements are required to reconstitute the segmental pattern of Xenopus hairy2. The first is a promoter element containing two binding sites for Xenopus Su(H), a transcriptional activator of Notch target genes. The second is a short sequence in the hairy2 3' untranslated region (UTR), which most likely functions posttranscriptionally to modulate hairy2 RNA levels. 3' UTRs of other hairy-related, segmentally expressed genes can substitute for that of hairy2. Our results demonstrate a novel mechanism regulating the segmental patterns of Notch target genes and suggest that vertebrate segmentation requires the intersection of two regulatory pathways.


Assuntos
Somitos/fisiologia , Proteínas de Xenopus/genética , Xenopus/genética , Regiões 3' não Traduzidas/genética , Animais , Animais Geneticamente Modificados , Sequência de Bases , Fatores de Transcrição Hélice-Alça-Hélice Básicos , Embrião não Mamífero/embriologia , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento , Proteínas de Membrana/genética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas/genética , RNA/genética , Receptores Notch , Vertebrados , Proteínas de Xenopus/metabolismo
3.
J Cell Biol ; 86(1): 330-4, 1980 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6893454

RESUMO

In this report, we examine how the cell can selectively stabilize anchored filaments and suppress spontaneous filament assembly. Because microtubules and actin filaments have an organized distribution in cells, the cell must have a mechanism for suppressing spontaneous and random polymerization. Though the mechanism for suppressing spontaneous polymerization is unknown, an unusual property of these filaments has been demonstrated recently, i.e., under steady-stae conditions, in vitro actin filaments and microtubules can exhibit a flux of subunits through the polymers called "treadmilling." In vivo, however, most, if not all, of these polymers are attached at one end to specific structures and treadmilling should not occur. The function of treadmilling in vivo is, therefore, unclear at present. However, as shown here, the same physicochemical property of coupling assembly to ATP or GTP hydrolysis that leads to treadmilling in vitro can act to selectively stabilize anchored polymers in vivo. I show here that the theory of treadmilling implies that the concentration of subunits necessary for assembly of the nonanchored polymer will in general be higher than the concentration necessary for the assembly of polymers anchored with a specific polarity. This disparity in the monomer concentrations required for assembly can lead to a selective stabilization of anchored polymers and complete suppression of spontaneous polymerization at apparent equilibrium in vivo. It is possible, therefore, that the phenomenon of treadmilling is an in vitro manifestation of a mechanism designed to use ATP or GTP hydrolysis to control the spatial organization of filaments in the cell.


Assuntos
Actinas/metabolismo , Citoesqueleto/ultraestrutura , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Guanosina Trifosfato/metabolismo , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Ligação Proteica
4.
J Cell Biol ; 128(1-2): 127-37, 1995 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7822410

RESUMO

To understand the role of microtubules in growth cone turning, we observed fluorescently labeled microtubules in neurons as they encountered a substrate boundary. Neurons growing on a laminin-rich substrate avoided growing onto collagen type IV. Turning growth cones assumed heterogeneous morphologies and behaviors that depended primarily in their extent of adhesion to the substrate. We grouped these behaviors into three categories-sidestepping, motility, and growth-mediated reorientation. In sidestepping and motility-mediated reorientation, the growth cone and parts of the axon were not well attached to the substrate so the acquisition of an adherent lamella caused the entire growth cone to move away from the border and consequently reoriented the axon. In these cases, since the motility of the growth cone dominates its reorientation, the microtubules were passive, and reorientation occurred without significant axon growth. In growth-mediated reorientation, the growth cone and axon were attached to the substrate. In this case, microtubules reoriented within the growth cone to stabilize a lamella. Bundling of the reoriented microtubules was followed by growth cone collapse to form new axon, and further, polarized lamellipodial extension. These observations indicate that when the growth cone remains adherent to the substrate during turning, the reorientation and bundling of microtubules is an important, early step in growth cone turning.


Assuntos
Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Neurônios/fisiologia , Animais , Adesão Celular , Divisão Celular , Movimento Celular , Colágeno , Feminino , Laminina , Modelos Estruturais , Sistema Nervoso/citologia , Sistema Nervoso/embriologia , Neurônios/citologia , Oócitos/fisiologia , Xenopus
5.
J Cell Biol ; 106(1): 151-9, 1988 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3339086

RESUMO

We have studied the capture of microtubules by isolated metaphase chromosomes, using microtubules stabilized with taxol and marked with biotin tubulin to distinguish their plus and minus ends. The capture reaction is reversible at both the plus and minus ends. The on rate of capture is the same for both polarities but the dissociation rate from the kinetochore is seven times slower with microtubules captured at their plus ends than those captured at their minus ends. At steady state this disparity in off rates leads to the gradual replacement of microtubules captured at their minus ends with those captured at their plus ends. These results suggest that the kinetochore makes a lateral attachment near the end of the microtubule in the initial capture reaction and shows a structural specificity that may be important in proper bipolar attachment of the chromosome to the spindle.


Assuntos
Centrômero/fisiologia , Cromossomos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Fuso Acromático/fisiologia , Trifosfato de Adenosina/fisiologia , Animais , Sistema Livre de Células , Cricetinae , Técnicas In Vitro , Mitose , Ligação Proteica
6.
J Cell Biol ; 83(1): 205-17, 1979 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-511939

RESUMO

We describe here the continuous observations of the polymerization of individual microtubules in vitro by darkfield microscopy. In homogeneous preparations we verify that polymerization can occur onto both ends of microtubules. The assembly of microtubules is polar, with one end growing at three times the rate of the other. The differential rate of elongation can be used to determine the polarity of growth off cellular nucleating centers. We show that the microtubules grow off the proximal end of ciliary axonemes at a growth rate equal to that of the slow growing end of free microtubules, while growth off the distal end proceeds at the same rate as the fast growing end. Applying this technique to microtubule growth from metaphase chromosomes isolated from HeLa and CHO cells, we demonstrate that chromosomes initiate polymerization with the fast growing end facing away from the chromosome nucleation site. The opposite ends of free microtubules show different sensitivities to microtubule depolymerizing agents such as low temperature, Ca++ or colchicine as measured directly by darkfield microscopy. The differing rates of assembly and disassembly of each end of a microtubule suggest that a difference in polarity of growth off nucleating sites could serve as one basis for regulating the polymerization of different groups of microtubules in the same cell.


Assuntos
Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Animais , Encéfalo/ultraestrutura , Substâncias Macromoleculares , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Suínos/anatomia & histologia , Suínos/fisiologia
7.
J Cell Biol ; 150(6): 1299-310, 2000 Sep 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10995436

RESUMO

Neuronal Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome protein (N-WASP) transmits signals from Cdc42 to the nucleation of actin filaments by Arp2/3 complex. Although full-length N-WASP is a weak activator of Arp2/3 complex, its activity can be enhanced by upstream regulators such as Cdc42 and PI(4,5)P(2). We dissected this activation reaction and found that the previously described physical interaction between the NH(2)-terminal domain and the COOH-terminal effector domain of N-WASP is a regulatory interaction because it can inhibit the actin nucleation activity of the effector domain by occluding the Arp2/3 binding site. This interaction between the NH(2)- and COOH termini must be intramolecular because in solution N-WASP is a monomer. Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PI(4,5)P(2)) influences the activity of N-WASP through a conserved basic sequence element located near the Cdc42 binding site rather than through the WASp homology domain 1. Like Cdc42, PI(4,5)P(2) reduces the affinity between the NH(2)- and COOH termini of the molecule. The use of a mutant N-WASP molecule lacking this basic stretch allowed us to delineate a signaling pathway in Xenopus extracts leading from PI(4, 5)P(2) to actin nucleation through Cdc42, N-WASP, and Arp2/3 complex. In this pathway, PI(4,5)P(2) serves two functions: first, as an activator of N-WASP; and second, as an indirect activator of Cdc42.


Assuntos
Proteínas do Citoesqueleto , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/metabolismo , Fosfatidilinositol 4,5-Difosfato/metabolismo , Síndrome de Wiskott-Aldrich/metabolismo , Proteína cdc42 de Ligação ao GTP/metabolismo , Proteína 2 Relacionada a Actina , Proteína 3 Relacionada a Actina , Actinas/metabolismo , Animais , Sítios de Ligação/fisiologia , Proteínas de Ligação ao GTP/metabolismo , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/química , Oócitos/fisiologia , Polímeros/metabolismo , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Ratos , Transdução de Sinais/fisiologia , Proteína Neuronal da Síndrome de Wiskott-Aldrich , Xenopus
8.
J Cell Biol ; 128(1-2): 139-55, 1995 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7822411

RESUMO

The growth cone contains dynamic and relatively stable microtubule populations, whose function in motility and axonal growth is uncharacterized. We have used vinblastine at low doses to inhibit microtubule dynamics without appreciable depolymerization to probe the role of these dynamics in growth cone behavior. At doses of vinblastine that interfere only with dynamics, the forward and persistent movement of the growth cone is inhibited and the growth cone wanders without appreciable forward translocation; it quickly resumes forward growth after the vinblastine is washed out. Direct visualization of fluorescently tagged microtubules in these neurons shows that in the absence of dynamic microtubules, the remaining mass of polymer does not invade the peripheral lamella and does not undergo the usual cycle of bundling and splaying and the growth cone stops forward movement. These experiments argue for a role for dynamic microtubules in allowing microtubule rearrangements in the growth cone. These rearrangements seem to be necessary for microtubule bundling, the subsequent coalescence of the cortex around the bundle to form new axon, and forward translocation of the growth cone.


Assuntos
Axônios/fisiologia , Axônios/ultraestrutura , Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Neurônios/citologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Animais , Movimento Celular/efeitos dos fármacos , Células Cultivadas , Fibroblastos/citologia , Fibroblastos/fisiologia , Cinética , Microtúbulos/efeitos dos fármacos , Sistema Nervoso/citologia , Sistema Nervoso/embriologia , Fenômenos Fisiológicos do Sistema Nervoso , Neurônios/efeitos dos fármacos , Fatores de Tempo , Vimblastina/farmacologia , Xenopus
9.
J Cell Biol ; 115(2): 345-63, 1991 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1918145

RESUMO

To understand how microtubules are generated in the growth cone, we have imaged fluorescently tagged microtubules in living frog embryonic neurons. The neurons were labeled by injecting rhodamine-labeled tubulin into the fertilized egg and explanting the neurons from the neural tube. Microtubules extend deep into the growth cone periphery and adopt three characteristic distributions: (a) dispersed and splayed throughout much of the growth cone; (b) looped and apparently contorted by compression; and (c) bundled into tight arrays. These distributions interconvert on a time scale of several minutes and these interconversions are correlated with the behavior of the growth cone. We observed microtubule growth and shrinkage in growth cones, but are unable to determine their contribution to net assembly. However, translocation of polymer form the axon appears to be a major mechanism of generating new polymer in the growth cone, while bundling of microtubules in the growth cone appears to be the critical step in generating new axon. Neurons that were about to turn spontaneously generated microtubules in the future direction of growth, suggesting that orientation of microtubules might be an important early step in neuronal pathfinding.


Assuntos
Axônios/metabolismo , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Neurônios/citologia , Animais , Axônios/ultraestrutura , Extratos Celulares , Células Cultivadas , Cinética , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Neurônios/metabolismo , Rodaminas/metabolismo , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Xenopus/embriologia
10.
J Cell Biol ; 115(3): 717-30, 1991 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1918161

RESUMO

Tau protein plays a role in the extension and maintenance of neuronal processes through a direct association with microtubules. To characterize the nature of this association, we have synthesized a collection of tau protein fragments and studied their binding properties. The relatively weak affinity of tau protein for microtubules (approximately 10(-7) M) is concentrated in a large region containing three or four 18 amino acid repeated binding elements. These are separated by apparently flexible but less conserved linker sequences of 13-14 amino acids that do not bind. Within the repeats, the binding energy for microtubules is delocalized and derives from a series of weak interactions contributed by small groups of amino acids. These unusual characteristics suggest tau protein can assume multiple conformations and can pivot and perhaps migrate on the surface of the microtubule. The flexible structure of the tau protein binding interaction may allow it to be easily displaced from the microtubule lattice and may have important consequences for its function.


Assuntos
Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Proteínas tau/metabolismo , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Bovinos , Cinética , Modelos Estruturais , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Oligonucleotídeos , Plasmídeos , Conformação Proteica , RNA Mensageiro/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/isolamento & purificação , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Sequências Repetitivas de Ácido Nucleico , Termodinâmica , Transcrição Gênica , Tubulina (Proteína)/isolamento & purificação , Proteínas tau/genética , Proteínas tau/isolamento & purificação
11.
J Cell Biol ; 105(5): 2191-201, 1987 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3680377

RESUMO

We have investigated the differences in microtubule assembly in cytoplasm from Xenopus oocytes and eggs in vitro. Extracts of activated eggs could be prepared that assembled extensive microtubule networks in vitro using Tetrahymena axonemes or mammalian centrosomes as nucleation centers. Assembly occurred predominantly from the plus-end of the microtubule with a rate constant of 2 microns.min-1.microM-1 (57 s-1.microM-1). At the in vivo tubulin concentration, this corresponds to the extraordinarily high rate of 40-50 microns.min-1. Microtubule disassembly rates in these extracts were -4.5 microns.min-1 (128 s-1) at the plus-end and -6.9 microns.min-1 (196 s-1) at the minus-end. The critical concentration for plus-end microtubule assembly was 0.4 microM. These extracts also promoted the plus-end assembly of microtubules from bovine brain tubulin, suggesting the presence of an assembly promoting factor in the egg. In contrast to activated eggs, assembly was never observed in extracts prepared from oocytes, even at tubulin concentrations as high as 20 microM. Addition of oocyte extract to egg extracts or to purified brain tubulin inhibited microtubule assembly. These results suggest that there is a plus-end-specific inhibitor of microtubule assembly in the oocyte and a plus-end-specific promoter of assembly in the eggs. These factors may serve to regulate microtubule assembly during early development in Xenopus.


Assuntos
Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Oócitos/ultraestrutura , Óvulo/ultraestrutura , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Animais , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Bovinos , Citoplasma/ultraestrutura , Feminino , Cinética , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Xenopus laevis
12.
J Cell Biol ; 105(5): 2203-15, 1987 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2890645

RESUMO

We have isolated a protein factor from Xenopus eggs that promotes microtubule assembly in vitro. Assembly promotion was associated with a 215-kD protein after a 1,000-3,000-fold enrichment of activity. The 215-kD protein, termed Xenopus microtubule assembly protein (XMAP), binds to microtubules with a stoichiometry of 0.06 mol/mol tubulin dimer. XMAP is immunologically distinct from the Xenopus homologues to mammalian brain microtubule-associated proteins; however, protein species immunologically related to XMAP with different molecular masses are found in Xenopus neuronal tissues and testis. XMAP is unusual in that it specifically promotes microtubule assembly at the plus-end. At a molar ratio of 0.01 mol XMAP/mol tubulin the assembly rate of the microtubule plus-end is accelerated 8-fold while the assembly rate of the minus-end is increased only 1.8-fold. Under these conditions XMAP promotes a 10-fold increase in the on-rate constant (from 1.4 s-1.microM-1 for microtubules assembled from pure tubulin to 15 s-1.microM-1), and a 10-fold decrease in off-rate constant (from 340 to 34 s-1). Given its stoichiometry in vivo, XMAP must be the major microtubule assembly factor in the Xenopus egg. XMAP is phosphorylated during M-phase of both meiotic and mitotic cycles, suggesting that its activity may be regulated during the cell cycle.


Assuntos
Proteínas Associadas aos Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Oócitos/ultraestrutura , Alcaloides/farmacologia , Animais , Feminino , Cinética , Meiose , Proteínas Associadas aos Microtúbulos/isolamento & purificação , Microtúbulos/efeitos dos fármacos , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Mitose , Peso Molecular , Oócitos/citologia , Oócitos/metabolismo , Paclitaxel , Fosforilação , Xenopus laevis
13.
J Cell Biol ; 98(3): 1090-7, 1984 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6421824

RESUMO

Tau protein is a collection of closely related polypeptides that associate with microtubules in vivo and stimulate their assembly in vitro. Using an affinity-purified antiserum against bovine brain tau protein, we found that the number and amount of tau polypeptides changes dramatically during mouse brain development. The different forms appear to result from changes in tau mRNA since in vitro translation products reflect the qualitative and quantitative changes found in vivo. To study the mRNA and genomic complexity of tau protein, we used tau mRNA, purified from polysomes with tau antiserum, to isolate embryonic mouse tau complementary DNA clones. With these probes we have determined that embryonic tau protein is translated from a 6-kb mRNA that persists throughout brain development.


Assuntos
Encéfalo/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/metabolismo , Proteínas/metabolismo , Animais , Bovinos , DNA/genética , Genes , Camundongos , Peso Molecular , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/genética , Biossíntese de Proteínas , Proteínas/classificação , Proteínas/genética , RNA Mensageiro/genética , Proteínas tau
14.
J Cell Biol ; 86(1): 212-34, 1980 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6893451

RESUMO

This report presents the appearance of rapidly frozen, freeze-dried cytoskeletons that have been rotary replicated with platinum and viewed in the transmission electron microscope. The resolution of this method is sufficient to visualize individual filaments in the cytoskeleton and to discriminate among actin, microtubules, and intermediate filaments solely by their surface substructure. This identification has been confirmed by specific decoration with antibodies and selective extraction of individual filament types, and correlated with light microscope immunocytochemistry and gel electrophoresis patterns. The freeze-drying preserves a remarkable degree of three-dimensionality in the organization of these cytoskeletons. They look strikingly similar to the meshwork of strands or "microtrabeculae" seen in the cytoplasm of whole cells by high voltage electron microscopy, in that the filaments form a lattice of the same configutation and with the same proportions of open area as the microtrabeculae seen in whole cells. The major differences between these two views of the structural elements of the cytoplasmic matrix can be attributed to the effects of aldehyde fixation and dehydration. Freeze-dried cytoskeletons thus provide an opportunity to study--at high resolution and in the absence of problems caused by chemical fixation--the detailed organization of filaments in different regions of the cytoplasm and at different stages of cell development. In this report the pattern of actin and intermediate filament organization in various regions of fully spread mouse fibroblasts is described.


Assuntos
Citoesqueleto/ultraestrutura , Microscopia Eletrônica/métodos , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Actinas/metabolismo , Animais , Galinhas , Liofilização , Congelamento , Camundongos , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo
15.
J Cell Biol ; 67(1): 105-17, 1975 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1236852

RESUMO

We have assayed various materials for their ability to induce aster formation by microinjection into unfertilized eggs of Xenopus laevis. We have found that purified basal bodies from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Tetrahymena pyriformis induce the formation of asters and irregular cleavage furrows within 1 h after injection. Other microtubule structures such as flagella, flagellar axonemes, cilia, and brain microtubules are completely ineffective at inducing asters or cleavage furrows in unfertilized eggs. When known amounts of sonicated Tetrahymena and Chlamydomonas preparations are injected into unfertilized eggs, 50% of the injected eggs show a furrowing response at approximately 3 cell equvalents for Chlamydomonas and 0.1 cell equivalent for Tetrahymena. These results are close to those expected if basal bodies were the effective astral-inducing agent in these cells. Other materials effective at inducing asters in unfertilized eggs, such as crude brain nuclei, sperm, and a particulate fraction from brain known to induce parthenogenesis in eggs of Rana pipiens, probably contain centrioles as the effective agent. Our experiments provide the first functional assay to indicate that centrioles play an active role in aster initiation. None of the injected materials effective in unfertilized eggs produced any observable response in fully grown oocytes. Oocytes and eggs were found to have equal tubulin pools as judged by colchicine-binding activity. Therefore, the inability of oocytes to form asters cannot be due to a lack of an organizing center or to a lack of tubulin. Experiments in which D2O was found to stimulate aster-like fibrous areas in eggs but not oocytes suggest that the inability of oocytes to form asters may be due to an inability of tubulin in oocytes to assemble.


Assuntos
Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Mitose , Organoides , Óvulo/ultraestrutura , Animais , Núcleo Celular , Chlamydomonas/ultraestrutura , Deutério/farmacologia , Feminino , Masculino , Microinjeções , Microtúbulos/ultraestrutura , Oócitos/metabolismo , Óvulo/metabolismo , Espermatozoides/fisiologia , Tetrahymena/ultraestrutura , Tubulina (Proteína)/análise , Xenopus
16.
J Cell Biol ; 100(3): 764-74, 1985 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2857724

RESUMO

We have examined the phosphorylation of cellular microtubule proteins during differentiation and neurite outgrowth in N115 mouse neuroblastoma cells. N115 differentiation, induced by serum withdrawal, is accompanied by a fourfold increase in phosphorylation of a 54,000-mol-wt protein identified as a specific isoform of beta-tubulin by SDS PAGE, two-dimensional isoelectric focusing/SDS PAGE, and immunoprecipitation with a specific monoclonal antiserum. Isoelectric focusing/SDS PAGE of [35S]methionine-labeled cell extracts revealed that the phosphorylated isoform of beta-tubulin, termed beta 2, is one of three isoforms detected in differentiated N115 cells, and is diminished in amounts in the undifferentiated cells. Taxol, a drug which promotes microtubule assembly, stimulates phosphorylation of beta-tubulin in both differentiated and undifferentiated N115 cells. In contrast, treatment of differentiated cells with either colcemid or nocodazole causes a rapid decrease in beta-tubulin phosphorylation. Thus, the phosphorylation of beta-tubulin in N115 cells is coupled to the levels of cellular microtubules. The observed increase in beta-tubulin phosphorylation during differentiation then reflects developmental regulation of microtubule assembly during neurite outgrowth, rather than developmental regulation of a tubulin kinase activity.


Assuntos
Neuroblastoma/metabolismo , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Alcaloides/farmacologia , Animais , Diferenciação Celular , Linhagem Celular , Demecolcina/farmacologia , Camundongos , Microtúbulos/efeitos dos fármacos , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Paclitaxel , Fosforilação
17.
J Cell Biol ; 154(5): 983-93, 2001 Sep 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11524435

RESUMO

The wnt pathway regulates the steady state level of beta-catenin, a transcriptional coactivator for the Tcf3/Lef1 family of DNA binding proteins. We demonstrate that Tcf3 can inhibit beta-catenin turnover via its competition with axin and adenomatous polyposis for beta-catenin binding. A mutant of beta-catenin that cannot bind Tcf3 is degraded faster than the wild-type protein in Xenopus embryos and extracts. A fragment of beta-catenin and a peptide encoding the NH2 terminus of Tcf4 that block the interaction between beta-catenin and Tcf3 stimulate beta-catenin degradation, indicating this interaction normally plays an important role in regulating beta-catenin turnover. Tcf3 is a substrate for both glycogen synthase kinase (GSK) 3 and casein kinase (CK) 1epsilon, and phosphorylation of Tcf3 by CKIepsilon stimulates its binding to beta-catenin, an effect reversed by GSK3. Tcf3 synergizes with CK1epsilon to inhibit beta-catenin degradation, whereas CKI-7, an inhibitor of CK1epsilon, reduces the inhibitory effect of Tcf3. Finally, we provide evidence that CK1epsilon stimulates the binding of dishevelled (dsh) to GSk3 binding protein (GBP) in extracts. Along with evidence that a significant amount of Tcf protein is nonnuclear, these findings suggest that CK1epsilon can modulate wnt signaling in vivo by regulating both the beta-catenin-Tcf3 and the GBP-dsh interfaces.


Assuntos
Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Proteínas HMGB , Proteínas Quinases/metabolismo , Proteínas Repressoras , Transativadores , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo , Proteínas Adaptadoras de Transdução de Sinal , Animais , Proteína Axina , Proteínas Quinases Dependentes de Cálcio-Calmodulina/metabolismo , Caseína Quinases , Fracionamento Celular , Proteínas do Citoesqueleto/genética , Proteínas Desgrenhadas , Quinase 3 da Glicogênio Sintase , Quinases da Glicogênio Sintase , Immunoblotting , Oócitos/fisiologia , Fosfoproteínas/metabolismo , Fosforilação , Ligação Proteica , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Proteínas/metabolismo , Proteínas Recombinantes/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/metabolismo , Fatores de Transcrição TCF , Proteína 1 Semelhante ao Fator 7 de Transcrição , Proteína 2 Semelhante ao Fator 7 de Transcrição , Proteínas de Xenopus , Xenopus laevis/embriologia , Xenopus laevis/fisiologia , beta Catenina
18.
J Cell Biol ; 101(3): 755-65, 1985 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4030893

RESUMO

We have isolated chromosomes from Chinese hamster ovary cells arrested in mitosis with vinblastine and examined the interactions of their kinetochores with purified tubulin in vitro. The kinetochores nucleate microtubule (MT) growth with complex kinetics. After an initial lag phase, MTs are continuously nucleated with both plus and minus ends distally localized. This mixed polarity seems inconsistent with the formation of an ordered, homopolar kinetochore fiber in vivo. As isolated from vinblastine-arrested cells, kinetochores contain no bound tubulin. The kinetochores of chromosomes isolated from colcemid-arrested cells or of chromosomes incubated with tubulin in vitro are brightly stained after anti-tubulin immunofluorescence. This bound tubulin is probably not in the form of MTs. It is localized to the corona region by immunoelectron microscopy, where it may play a role in MT nucleation in vitro.


Assuntos
Centrômero/fisiologia , Cromossomos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Fuso Acromático/fisiologia , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Animais , Sistema Livre de Células , Cricetinae , Cricetulus , Demecolcina/farmacologia , Feminino , Técnicas In Vitro , Microscopia Eletrônica , Ovário , Ligação Proteica , Fuso Acromático/ultraestrutura , Vimblastina/farmacologia
19.
J Cell Biol ; 101(3): 766-77, 1985 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-4030894

RESUMO

We have studied the interaction of preformed microtubules (MTs) with the kinetochores of isolated chromosomes. This reaction, which we call MT capture, results in MTs becoming tightly bound to the kinetochore, with their ends capped against depolymerization. These observations, combined with MT dynamic instability, suggest a model for spindle morphogenesis. In addition, ATP appears to mobilize dynamic processes at captured MT ends. We used biotin-labeled MT seeds to follow assembly dynamics at the kinetochore. In the presence of ATP and unlabeled tubulin, labeled MT segments translocate away from the kinetochore by polymerization of subunits at the attached end. We have termed this reaction proximal assembly. Further studies demonstrated that translocation could be uncoupled from MT assembly. We suggest that the kinetochore contains an ATPase activity that walks along the MT lattice toward the plus end. This activity may be responsible for the movement of chromosomes away from the pole in prometaphase.


Assuntos
Centrômero/fisiologia , Cromossomos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Fuso Acromático/fisiologia , Trifosfato de Adenosina/metabolismo , Animais , Cricetinae , Cricetulus , Feminino , Técnicas In Vitro , Cinética , Morfogênese , Movimento , Ovário , Fuso Acromático/ultraestrutura , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo
20.
J Cell Biol ; 103(6 Pt 2): 2739-46, 1986 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3098742

RESUMO

Tau protein from mammalian brain promotes microtubule polymerization in vitro and is induced during nerve cell differentiation. However, the effects of tau or any other microtubule-associated protein on tubulin assembly within cells are presently unknown. We have tested tau protein activity in vivo by microinjection into a cell type that has no endogenous tau protein. Immunofluorescence shows that tau protein microinjected into fibroblast cells associates specifically with microtubules. The injected tau protein increases tubulin polymerization and stabilizes microtubules against depolymerization. This increased polymerization does not, however, cause major changes in cell morphology or microtubule arrangement. Thus, tau protein acts in vivo primarily to induce tubulin assembly and stabilize microtubules, activities that may be necessary, but not sufficient, for neuronal morphogenesis.


Assuntos
Proteínas Associadas aos Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Microtúbulos/fisiologia , Animais , Células Cultivadas , Fibroblastos/ultraestrutura , Imunofluorescência , Microinjeções , Proteínas Associadas aos Microtúbulos/administração & dosagem , Morfogênese , Ratos , Tubulina (Proteína)/metabolismo , Proteínas tau
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