Weisenberg R C, Deery W J, Dickinson P J
Biochemistry. 1976 Sep 21;15(19):4248-54. doi: 10.1021/bi00664a018.
The interactions of nucleotides and their role in the polymerization of tubulin have been studied in detail. GTP promotes polymerization by binding to the exchangeable site (E site) of tubulin. The microtubules formed contain only GDP at the E site, indicating that hydrolysis of E site GTP occurs during or shortly after polymerization. Tubulin prepared by several cycles of polymerization and depolymerization will polymerize in the presence of ATP as well as GTP. Polymerization in ATP is preceded by a distinct lag period which is shorter at higher concentrations of ATP. As reported by others ATP will transphosphorylate bound GDP to GTP. Under polymerizing conditions the maximum level of GTP formation occurs at about the same time as the onset of polymerization, and the lag probably reflects the time necessary to transphosphorylate a critical concentration of tubulin. The transphosphorylated protein can be isolated and will polymerize without further addition of nucleotide. The transphosphorylated GTP is hydrolyzed and the phosphate released during polymerization. About 25% of the phosphate transferred from ATP is noncovalently bound to the subunit as inorganic phosphate and this fraction is also released during polymerization. The nonhydrolyzable analogue of GTP, GMPPNP, will promote microtubule assembly at high concentration. GMPPNP assembled microtubules do not depolymerize in Ca concentrations several fold greater than that which will completely depolymerize GTP assembled tubules; however, addition of Ca prior to inducing polymerization in GMPPNP prevents the formation of microtubules. Thus GTP hydrolysis appears to promote depolymerization rather than polymerization. GDP does not promote microtubule assembly but can inhibit GTP binding and GTP induced polymerization. GDP does not, however, induce the depolymerization of formed microtubules. These experiments demonstrate that tubulin polymerization can not be treated as a thermodynamically reversible process, but must involve one or more irreversible steps. Exchange experiments with [3H]GTP indicate that the "E" site on both microtubules and ring aggregates of tubulin is blocked and does not exchange rapidly. However, during polymerization and depolymerization induced by raising or lowering the temperature, respectively, all the E sites become transiently available and will exchange their nucleotide. This observation does not suggest a direct morphological transition between rings and microtubules. The presence of a blocked E site on the rings explains the apparent transphosphorylation and hydrolysis of "N" site nucleotide reported by others.
核苷酸的相互作用及其在微管蛋白聚合中的作用已得到详细研究。GTP通过与微管蛋白的可交换位点(E位点)结合来促进聚合。形成的微管在E位点仅含有GDP,这表明E位点GTP的水解发生在聚合过程中或聚合后不久。通过几个聚合和解聚循环制备的微管蛋白在ATP以及GTP存在的情况下都会聚合。在ATP中聚合之前有一个明显的延迟期,在较高浓度的ATP下延迟期较短。正如其他人所报道的,ATP会将结合的GDP转磷酸化为GTP。在聚合条件下,GTP形成的最大水平大约与聚合开始同时出现,延迟可能反映了将关键浓度的微管蛋白转磷酸化所需的时间。转磷酸化的蛋白质可以分离出来,并且在不进一步添加核苷酸的情况下也会聚合。转磷酸化的GTP会被水解,并且在聚合过程中释放出磷酸。从ATP转移的磷酸中约25%以无机磷酸的形式非共价结合到亚基上,并且这部分在聚合过程中也会释放出来。GTP的不可水解类似物GMPPNP在高浓度下会促进微管组装。GMPPNP组装的微管在Ca浓度比完全解聚GTP组装的微管所需浓度高几倍的情况下不会解聚;然而,在GMPPNP中诱导聚合之前添加Ca会阻止微管的形成。因此,GTP水解似乎促进解聚而不是聚合。GDP不会促进微管组装,但可以抑制GTP结合和GTP诱导的聚合。然而,GDP不会诱导已形成微管的解聚。这些实验表明,微管蛋白聚合不能被视为一个热力学可逆过程,而必须涉及一个或多个不可逆步骤。用[3H]GTP进行的交换实验表明,微管和微管蛋白环聚集体上的“E”位点被阻断,并且不会快速交换。然而,在分别通过升高或降低温度诱导的聚合和解聚过程中,所有的E位点都会暂时可用并会交换它们的核苷酸。这一观察结果并不表明环和微管之间存在直接的形态转变。环上存在被阻断的E位点解释了其他人报道的“N”位点核苷酸的明显转磷酸化和水解现象。