Structural Transitions at Microtubule Ends Correlate with Their Dynamic Properties in Xenopus Egg Extracts
Open Access
- 15 May 2000
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 149 (4) , 767-774
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.149.4.767
Abstract
Microtubules are dynamically unstable polymers that interconvert stochastically between growing and shrinking states by the addition and loss of subunits from their ends. However, there is little experimental data on the relationship between microtubule end structure and the regulation of dynamic instability. To investigate this relationship, we have modulated dynamic instability in Xenopus egg extracts by adding a catastrophe-promoting factor, Op18/stathmin. Using electron cryomicroscopy, we find that microtubules in cytoplasmic extracts grow by the extension of a two- dimensional sheet of protofilaments, which later closes into a tube. Increasing the catastrophe frequency by the addition of Op18/stathmin decreases both the length and frequency of the occurrence of sheets and increases the number of frayed ends. Interestingly, we also find that more dynamic populations contain more blunt ends, suggesting that these are a metastable intermediate between shrinking and growing microtubules. Our results demonstrate for the first time that microtubule assembly in physiological conditions is a two-dimensional process, and they suggest that the two-dimensional sheets stabilize microtubules against catastrophes. We present a model in which the frequency of catastrophes is directly correlated with the structural state of microtubule ends.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microtubule's Conformational Cap.Cell Structure and Function, 1999
- Distinct roles of PP1 and PP2A-like phosphatases in control of microtubule dynamics during mitosisThe EMBO Journal, 1997
- Evidence that a single monolayer tubulin-GTP cap is both necessary and sufficient to stabilize microtubules.Molecular Biology of the Cell, 1996
- The minimum GTP cap required to stabilize microtubulesCurrent Biology, 1994
- Lattice defects in microtubules: protofilament numbers vary within individual microtubulesThe Journal of cell biology, 1992
- Microtubule dynamics and microtubule caps: a time-resolved cryo-electron microscopy study.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- New data on the microtubule surface latticeBiology of the Cell, 1991
- Real-time visualization of cell cycle-dependent changes in microtubule dynamics in cytoplasmic extractsCell, 1990
- Cold depolymerization of microtubules to double rings: geometric stabilization of assembliesBiochemistry, 1989
- Quantitative electron microscopy of microtubule assembly in vitroJournal of Molecular Biology, 1975