Keskin Ozlem, Durell Stewart R, Bahar Ivet, Jernigan Robert L, Covell David G
Computational Technologies Laboratory, Screening Technologies Branch, Developmental Therapeutics Program, National Cancer Institute-Frederick, National Institutes of Health, Frederick, Maryland 21702 USA.
Biophys J. 2002 Aug;83(2):663-80. doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(02)75199-0.
Microtubules (MT), along with a variety of associated motor proteins, are involved in a range of cellular functions including vesicle movement, chromosome segregation, and cell motility. MTs are assemblies of heterodimeric proteins, alpha beta-tubulins, the structure of which has been determined by electron crystallography of zinc-induced, pacilitaxel-stabilized tubulin sheets. These data provide a basis for examining relationships between structural features and protein function. Here, we study the fluctuation dynamics of the tubulin dimer with the aim of elucidating its functional motions relevant to substrate binding, polymerization/depolymerization and MT assembly. A coarse-grained model, harmonically constrained according to the crystal structure, is used to explore the global dynamics of the dimer. Our results identify six regions of collective motion, comprised of structurally close but discontinuous sequence fragments, observed only in the dimeric form, dimerization being a prerequisite for domain identification. Boundaries between regions of collective motions appear to act as linkages, found primarily within secondary-structure elements that lack sequence conservation, but are located at minima in the fluctuation curve, at positions of hydrophobic residues. Residue fluctuations within these domains identify the most mobile regions as loops involved in recognition of the adjacent regions. The least mobile regions are associated with nucleotide binding sites where lethal mutations occur. The functional coupling of motions between and within regions identifies three global motions: torsional and wobbling movements, en bloc, between the alpha- and beta-tubulin monomers, and stretching longitudinally. Further analysis finds the antitumor drug pacilitaxel (TaxotereR) to reduce flexibility in the M loop of the beta-tubulin monomer; an effect that may contribute to tightening lateral interactions between protofilaments assembled into MTs. Our analysis provides insights into relationships between intramolecular tubulin movements of MT organization and function.
微管(MT)与多种相关的运动蛋白一起,参与一系列细胞功能,包括囊泡运输、染色体分离和细胞运动。微管是异二聚体蛋白αβ-微管蛋白的组装体,其结构已通过锌诱导、紫杉醇稳定的微管蛋白片层的电子晶体学确定。这些数据为研究结构特征与蛋白质功能之间的关系提供了基础。在这里,我们研究微管蛋白二聚体的波动动力学,旨在阐明其与底物结合、聚合/解聚以及微管组装相关的功能运动。我们使用一个根据晶体结构进行谐波约束的粗粒度模型来探索二聚体的全局动力学。我们的结果确定了六个集体运动区域,这些区域由结构上紧密但不连续的序列片段组成,仅在二聚体形式中观察到,二聚化是区域识别的先决条件。集体运动区域之间的边界似乎起到了连接作用,主要发现在缺乏序列保守性的二级结构元件内,但位于波动曲线的最小值处,在疏水残基的位置。这些结构域内的残基波动将最易移动的区域识别为参与相邻区域识别的环。最不易移动的区域与发生致死突变的核苷酸结合位点相关。区域之间和区域内运动的功能耦合确定了三种全局运动:α-和β-微管蛋白单体之间的扭转和摆动运动、整体运动以及纵向拉伸。进一步分析发现抗肿瘤药物紫杉醇(泰素帝)可降低β-微管蛋白单体M环的柔韧性;这种效应可能有助于加强组装成微管的原纤维之间的横向相互作用。我们的分析为微管组织和功能的分子内微管蛋白运动之间的关系提供了见解。