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1.
Dev Cell ; 56(14): 2016-2028.e4, 2021 07 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34022132

ABSTRACT

Microtubules are non-covalent polymers of αß-tubulin dimers. Posttranslational processing of the intrinsically disordered C-terminal α-tubulin tail produces detyrosinated and Δ2-tubulin. Although these are widely employed as proxies for stable cellular microtubules, their effect (and of the α-tail) on microtubule dynamics remains uncharacterized. Using recombinant, engineered human tubulins, we now find that neither detyrosinated nor Δ2-tubulin affect microtubule dynamics, while the α-tubulin tail is an inhibitor of microtubule growth. Consistent with the latter, molecular dynamics simulations show the α-tubulin tail transiently occluding the longitudinal microtubule polymerization interface. The marked differential in vivo stabilities of the modified microtubule subpopulations, therefore, must result exclusively from selective effector recruitment. We find that tyrosination quantitatively tunes CLIP-170 density at the growing plus end and that CLIP170 and EB1 synergize to selectively upregulate the dynamicity of tyrosinated microtubules. Modification-dependent recruitment of regulators thereby results in microtubule subpopulations with distinct dynamics, a tenet of the tubulin code hypothesis.


Subject(s)
Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Microtubules/chemistry , Neoplasm Proteins/metabolism , Polymers/chemistry , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Tubulin/chemistry , Tyrosine/metabolism , Humans , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics , Microtubules/physiology , Neoplasm Proteins/genetics
2.
Dev Cell ; 52(1): 118-131.e6, 2020 01 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31735665

ABSTRACT

The AAA ATPase katanin severs microtubules. It is critical in cell division, centriole biogenesis, and neuronal morphogenesis. Its mutation causes microcephaly. The microtubule templates katanin hexamerization and activates its ATPase. The structural basis for these activities and how they lead to severing is unknown. Here, we show that ß-tubulin tails are necessary and sufficient for severing. Cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures reveal the essential tubulin tail glutamates gripped by a double spiral of electropositive loops lining the katanin central pore. Each spiral couples allosterically to the ATPase and binds alternating, successive substrate residues, with consecutive residues coordinated by adjacent protomers. This tightly couples tail binding, hexamerization, and ATPase activation. Hexamer structures in different states suggest an ATPase-driven, ratchet-like translocation of the tubulin tail through the pore. A disordered region outside the AAA core anchors katanin to the microtubule while the AAA motor exerts the forces that extract tubulin dimers and sever the microtubule.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolism , Katanin/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism , Tubulin/metabolism , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Animals , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans/growth & development , Humans , Katanin/chemistry , Katanin/genetics , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Tubulin/chemistry , Tubulin/genetics
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