Interaction of substance P with tubulin

Abstract
Binding of the peptide neurotransmitter substance P to brain tubulin in vitro inhibits self-assembly of the protein into microtubules and disrupts preassembled microtubules. This cooperative inhibition of the maximum extent of self-assembly by substance P is explicable in terms of preferential binding to the protomer state as compared to the polymer state of tubulin. The inhibition is relieved by the microtubule-associated protein MAP2, which evidently acts in a mixed competitive-noncompetitive fashion. Substance P interacts directly with the isolated C-terminal 4-kDa peptide fragment of tubulin, which appears to contain the specific binding area for MAP2, but is without effect on the self-assembly of the larger (48-kDa) part of the tubulin molecule called S-tubulin. The results are consistent with the C-terminal fragment having a binding site for the cationic substance P as well as for MAP2. However, factors other than electrostatic interaction must be operative, since the sulfoxide of substance P, a derivative with oxidized methionine but similar electrostatic characteristics, is inactive in inhibiting the extent of microtubule assembly.