A novel protein complex promoting formation of functional alpha - and gamma -tubulin
Open Access
- 15 February 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in The EMBO Journal
- Vol. 17 (4) , 952-966
- https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/17.4.952
Abstract
We describe the identification of GIM1/YKE2, GIM2/PAC10, GIM3, GIM4 and GIM5 in a screen for mutants that are synthetically lethal with tub4‐1 , encoding a mutated yeast γ‐tubulin. The cytoplasmic Gim proteins encoded by these GIM genes are present in common complexes as judged by co‐immunoprecipitation and gel filtration experiments. The disruption of any of these genes results in similar phenotypes: the gim null mutants are synthetically lethal with tub4‐1 and super‐sensitive towards the microtubule‐depolymerizing drug benomyl. All except Δgim4 are cold‐sensitive and their microtubules disassemble at 14°C. The Gim proteins have one function related to α‐tubulin and another to Tub4p, supported by the finding that the benomyl super‐sensitivity is caused by a reduced level of α‐tubulin while the synthetic lethality with tub4‐1 is not. In addition, GIM1/YKE2 genetically interacts with two distinct classes of genes, one of which is involved in tubulin folding and the other in microtubule nucleation. We show that the Gim proteins are important for Tub4p function and bind to overproduced Tub4p. The mammalian homologues of GIM1/YKE2 and GIM2/PAC10 rescue the synthetically lethal phenotype with tub4‐1 as well as the cold‐sensitivity and benomyl super‐sensitivity of the yeast deletion mutants. We suggest that the Gim proteins form a protein complex that promotes formation of functional α‐ and γ‐tubulin.Keywords
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