Manna Tapas, Thrower Douglas A, Honnappa Srinivas, Steinmetz Michel O, Wilson Leslie
Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology and the Neuroscience Research Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2009 Jun 5;284(23):15640-9. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M900343200. Epub 2009 Apr 8.
Stathmin is an important regulator of microtubule polymerization and dynamics. When unphosphorylated it destabilizes microtubules in two ways, by reducing the microtubule polymer mass through sequestration of soluble tubulin into an assembly-incompetent T2S complex (two alpha:beta tubulin dimers per molecule of stathmin), and by increasing the switching frequency (catastrophe frequency) from growth to shortening at plus and minus ends by binding directly to the microtubules. Phosphorylation of stathmin on one or more of its four serine residues (Ser(16), Ser(25), Ser(38), and Ser(63)) reduces its microtubule-destabilizing activity. However, the effects of phosphorylation of the individual serine residues of stathmin on microtubule dynamic instability have not been investigated systematically. Here we analyzed the effects of stathmin singly phosphorylated at Ser(16) or Ser(63), and doubly phosphorylated at Ser(25) and Ser(38), on its ability to modulate microtubule dynamic instability at steady-state in vitro. Phosphorylation at either Ser(16) or Ser(63) strongly reduced or abolished the ability of stathmin to bind to and sequester soluble tubulin and its ability to act as a catastrophe factor by directly binding to the microtubules. In contrast, double phosphorylation of Ser(25) and Ser(38) did not affect the binding of stathmin to tubulin or microtubules or its catastrophe-promoting activity. Our results indicate that the effects of stathmin on dynamic instability are strongly but differently attenuated by phosphorylation at Ser(16) and Ser(63) and support the hypothesis that selective targeting by Ser(16)-specific or Ser(63)-specific kinases provides complimentary mechanisms for regulating microtubule function.
Stathmin是微管聚合和动力学的重要调节因子。未磷酸化时,它通过两种方式使微管不稳定:一是通过将可溶性微管蛋白隔离到无组装能力的T2S复合物(每个Stathmin分子有两个α:β微管蛋白二聚体)中,从而减少微管聚合物质量;二是通过直接结合微管,增加微管正端和负端从生长到缩短的转换频率(灾难频率)。Stathmin四个丝氨酸残基(Ser(16)、Ser(25)、Ser(38)和Ser(63))中的一个或多个发生磷酸化会降低其使微管不稳定的活性。然而,尚未系统研究Stathmin单个丝氨酸残基磷酸化对微管动态不稳定性的影响。在此,我们分析了在体外稳态下,Stathmin在Ser(16)或Ser(63)处单磷酸化以及在Ser(25)和Ser(38)处双磷酸化对其调节微管动态不稳定性能力的影响。Ser(16)或Ser(63)处的磷酸化强烈降低或消除了Stathmin结合和隔离可溶性微管蛋白的能力以及通过直接结合微管作为灾难因子的能力。相反,Ser(25)和Ser(38)的双磷酸化不影响Stathmin与微管蛋白或微管的结合及其促进灾难的活性。我们的结果表明,Stathmin对动态不稳定性的影响因Ser(16)和Ser(63)处的磷酸化而强烈但不同程度地减弱,并支持这样的假设,即Ser(16)特异性或Ser(63)特异性激酶的选择性靶向提供了调节微管功能的互补机制。