Maccioni R B, Cambiazo V
Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, University of Chile, Santiago.
Physiol Rev. 1995 Oct;75(4):835-64. doi: 10.1152/physrev.1995.75.4.835.
In eukaryotic cells, microtubules, actin, and intermediate filaments interact to form the cytoskeletal network involved in determination of cell architecture, intracellular transport, modulation of surface receptors, mitosis, cell motility, and differentiation. Cytoskeletal organization and dynamics depend on protein self-associations and interactions with regulatory elements such as microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs). The MAP family includes large proteins like MAP-1A, MAP-1B, MAP-1C, MAP-2, and MAP-4 and smaller components like tau and MAP-2C. This review focuses on relevant aspects of MAP function, with emphasis on their roles in modulating cytoskeletal interactions. In this context, MAP expression mechanisms and posttranslational modifications are also discussed. Microtubule-associated proteins have a rather widespread distribution among cells, but certain MAPs have been identified in specific cell types. Within single neurons, MAP-2 is dendritic while tau is preferentially an axonal protein. Their expression is developmentally regulated. Even though MAPs share a capacity to interact with the COOH-terminal tubulin domain, stabilize microtubules, and link them with other cytoskeletal polymers, they exhibit structural differences. However, MAP-2, MAP-4, and tau have common repetitive microtubule-binding motifs. Microtubule-associated proteins not only control cytoskeletal integrity, but they also appear to interact with highly structural elements of cells. Molecular biological approaches permitted localization of new MAPs in cultured mammalian cells and invertebrate organisms and other microtubule-interacting proteins that exhibit transient interactions with microtubules. The structural/functional aspects of several new MAP-like proteins in centrosomes and the mitotic spindle, functionally implicated in cell cycle events, are also analyzed.
在真核细胞中,微管、肌动蛋白和中间丝相互作用形成细胞骨架网络,该网络参与细胞结构的确定、细胞内运输、表面受体的调节、有丝分裂、细胞运动和分化。细胞骨架的组织和动态变化取决于蛋白质的自我组装以及与微管相关蛋白(MAPs)等调节元件的相互作用。MAP家族包括像MAP-1A、MAP-1B、MAP-1C、MAP-2和MAP-4这样的大蛋白以及像tau和MAP-2C这样的小蛋白。本综述聚焦于MAP功能的相关方面,重点关注它们在调节细胞骨架相互作用中的作用。在此背景下,还讨论了MAP的表达机制和翻译后修饰。微管相关蛋白在细胞中分布相当广泛,但已在特定细胞类型中鉴定出某些MAP。在单个神经元内,MAP-2存在于树突中,而tau则优先是一种轴突蛋白。它们的表达受发育调控。尽管MAPs具有与微管蛋白COOH末端结构域相互作用、稳定微管并将它们与其他细胞骨架聚合物连接的能力,但它们呈现出结构差异。然而,MAP-2、MAP-4和tau具有共同的重复微管结合基序。微管相关蛋白不仅控制细胞骨架的完整性,而且它们似乎还与细胞的高度结构化元件相互作用。分子生物学方法使得能够在培养的哺乳动物细胞和无脊椎动物中定位新的MAP以及其他与微管具有瞬时相互作用的微管相互作用蛋白。还分析了中心体和有丝分裂纺锤体中几种新的MAP样蛋白的结构/功能方面,它们在功能上与细胞周期事件相关。