Vértessy B G, Kovács J, Löw P, Lehotzky A, Molnár A, Orosz F, Ovádi J
Institute of Enzymology, Biological Research Center, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest.
Biochemistry. 1997 Feb 25;36(8):2051-62. doi: 10.1021/bi9623441.
Phosphofructokinase interacts with both microtubules and microtubules containing microtubule-associated proteins to produce bundling and periodical cross-bridging of tubules. Immunoelectron microscopy using anti-phosphofructokinase antibodies provided direct evidence that the kinase molecules are responsible for the cross-bridging of microtubules. Limited proteolysis by subtilisin, a procedure that cleaves the N-terminal segment of the free enzyme as well as the C-terminal "tails" of tubulin subunits exposed on microtubules, showed that while phosphofructokinase becomes resistant, tubulin retains sensitivity against proteolysis within the heterologous complex. These data suggest that the N-terminal segment of the enzyme, but not the C-terminal "tail" of tubulin subunits, is involved in the interaction between the microtubule and the kinase. The phosphorylation of phosphofructokinase or microtubules containing microtubule-associated proteins by the cAMP-dependent protein kinase did not interfere with the heterologous complex formation. MgATP prevents phosphofructokinase binding to the microtubules, and it can displace the enzyme from the single microtubules. However, the bundled microtubules are apparently resistant to the MgATP dissociation effect. Modelling of the assembly process suggests that the tubulin-kinase complex is able to polymerize as the free tubulin. Vinblastine, an anti-mitotic agent, inhibits tubulin assembly; however, its inhibitory effect is partially suppressed in the presence of phosphofructokinase. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements indicated that kinase and vinblastine compete for tubulin binding with no evidence for ternary complex formation. This competitive mechanism and the ability of the tubulin-enzyme complex to polymerize into microtubules may result in the resistance of the tubulin-enzyme complex against the inhibition of assembly induced by vinblastine. Microtubules formed in the presence of vinblastine plus phosphofructokinase can be visualized by electron microscopy. A molecular model is suggested that summarizes the effects of MgATP and vinblastine on the multiple equilibria in the tubulin/microtubules/phosphofructokinase system.
磷酸果糖激酶与微管以及含有微管相关蛋白的微管相互作用,从而使微管形成束状并产生周期性的交叉桥连。使用抗磷酸果糖激酶抗体的免疫电子显微镜提供了直接证据,证明激酶分子负责微管的交叉桥连。枯草杆菌蛋白酶进行的有限蛋白水解实验(该过程会切割游离酶的N端片段以及微管上暴露的微管蛋白亚基的C端“尾巴”)表明,虽然磷酸果糖激酶变得具有抗性,但微管蛋白在异源复合物中仍保持对蛋白水解的敏感性。这些数据表明,酶的N端片段而非微管蛋白亚基的C端“尾巴”参与了微管与激酶之间的相互作用。cAMP依赖性蛋白激酶对磷酸果糖激酶或含有微管相关蛋白的微管的磷酸化作用并不干扰异源复合物的形成。MgATP可阻止磷酸果糖激酶与微管结合,并且能将该酶从单个微管上置换下来。然而,束状微管显然对MgATP的解离作用具有抗性。组装过程的模型表明,微管蛋白 - 激酶复合物能够像游离微管蛋白一样聚合。长春碱是一种抗有丝分裂剂,可抑制微管蛋白组装;然而,在存在磷酸果糖激酶的情况下,其抑制作用会部分受到抑制。荧光各向异性测量表明,激酶和长春碱竞争与微管蛋白结合,没有形成三元复合物的证据。这种竞争机制以及微管蛋白 - 酶复合物聚合成微管的能力可能导致微管蛋白 - 酶复合物对长春碱诱导的组装抑制具有抗性。在长春碱和磷酸果糖激酶存在的情况下形成的微管可以通过电子显微镜观察到。提出了一个分子模型,总结了MgATP和长春碱对微管蛋白/微管/磷酸果糖激酶系统中多个平衡的影响。