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1

Zwetsloot, Alexander James, Gokhan Tut, and Anne Straube. "Measuring microtubule dynamics." Essays in Biochemistry 62, no. 6 (October 4, 2018): 725–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/ebc20180035.

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Microtubules are key players in cellular self-organization, acting as structural scaffolds, cellular highways, force generators and signalling platforms. Microtubules are polar filaments that undergo dynamic instability, i.e. transition between phases of growth and shrinkage. This allows microtubules to explore the inner space of the cell, generate pushing and pulling forces and remodel themselves into arrays with different geometry and function such as the mitotic spindle. To do this, eukaryotic cells employ an arsenal of regulatory proteins to control microtubule dynamics spatially and temporally. Plants and microorganisms have developed secondary metabolites that perturb microtubule dynamics, many of which are in active use as cancer chemotherapeutics and anti-inflammatory drugs. Here, we summarize the methods used to visualize microtubules and to measure the parameters of dynamic instability to study both microtubule regulatory proteins and the action of small molecules interfering with microtubule assembly and/or disassembly.
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2

Vemu, Annapurna, Joseph Atherton, Jeffrey O. Spector, Carolyn A. Moores, and Antonina Roll-Mecak. "Tubulin isoform composition tunes microtubule dynamics." Molecular Biology of the Cell 28, no. 25 (December 2017): 3564–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e17-02-0124.

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Microtubules polymerize and depolymerize stochastically, a behavior essential for cell division, motility, and differentiation. While many studies advanced our understanding of how microtubule-associated proteins tune microtubule dynamics in trans, we have yet to understand how tubulin genetic diversity regulates microtubule functions. The majority of in vitro dynamics studies are performed with tubulin purified from brain tissue. This preparation is not representative of tubulin found in many cell types. Here we report the 4.2-Å cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structure and in vitro dynamics parameters of α1B/βI+βIVb microtubules assembled from tubulin purified from a human embryonic kidney cell line with isoform composition characteristic of fibroblasts and many immortalized cell lines. We find that these microtubules grow faster and transition to depolymerization less frequently compared with brain microtubules. Cryo-EM reveals that the dynamic ends of α1B/βI+βIVb microtubules are less tapered and that these tubulin heterodimers display lower curvatures. Interestingly, analysis of EB1 distributions at dynamic ends suggests no differences in GTP cap sizes. Last, we show that the addition of recombinant α1A/βIII tubulin, a neuronal isotype overexpressed in many tumors, proportionally tunes the dynamics of α1B/βI+βIVb microtubules. Our study is an important step toward understanding how tubulin isoform composition tunes microtubule dynamics.
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3

Parker, Amelia L., Wee Siang Teo, Elvis Pandzic, Juan Jesus Vicente, Joshua A. McCarroll, Linda Wordeman, and Maria Kavallaris. "β-Tubulin carboxy-terminal tails exhibit isotype-specific effects on microtubule dynamics in human gene-edited cells." Life Science Alliance 1, no. 2 (April 19, 2018): e201800059. http://dx.doi.org/10.26508/lsa.201800059.

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Microtubules are highly dynamic structures that play an integral role in fundamental cellular functions. Different α- and β-tubulin isotypes are thought to confer unique dynamic properties to microtubules. The tubulin isotypes have highly conserved structures, differing mainly in their carboxy-terminal (C-terminal) tail sequences. However, little is known about the importance of the C-terminal tail in regulating and coordinating microtubule dynamics. We developed syngeneic human cell models using gene editing to precisely modify the β-tubulin C-terminal tail region while preserving the endogenous microtubule network. Fluorescent microscopy of live cells, coupled with advanced image analysis, revealed that the β-tubulin C-terminal tails differentially coordinate the collective and individual dynamic behavior of microtubules by affecting microtubule growth rates and explorative microtubule assembly in an isotype-specific manner. Furthermore, βI- and βIII-tubulin C-terminal tails differentially regulate the sensitivity of microtubules to tubulin-binding agents and the microtubule depolymerizing protein mitotic centromere-associated kinesin. The sequence of the β-tubulin tail encodes regulatory information that instructs and coordinates microtubule dynamics, thereby fine-tuning microtubule dynamics to support cellular functions.
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4

Gupta, Mohan L., Claudia J. Bode, Douglas A. Thrower, Chad G. Pearson, Kathy A. Suprenant, Kerry S. Bloom, and Richard H. Himes. "β-Tubulin C354 Mutations that Severely Decrease Microtubule Dynamics Do Not Prevent Nuclear Migration in Yeast." Molecular Biology of the Cell 13, no. 8 (August 2002): 2919–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e02-01-0003.

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Microtubule dynamics are influenced by interactions of microtubules with cellular factors and by changes in the primary sequence of the tubulin molecule. Mutations of yeast β-tubulin C354, which is located near the binding site of some antimitotic compounds, reduce microtubule dynamicity greater than 90% in vivo and in vitro. The resulting intrinsically stable microtubules allowed us to determine which, if any, cellular processes are dependent on dynamic microtubules. The average number of cytoplasmic microtubules decreased from 3 in wild-type to 1 in mutant cells. The single microtubule effectively located the bud site before bud emergence. Although spindles were positioned near the bud neck at the onset of anaphase, the mutant cells were deficient in preanaphase spindle alignment along the mother-bud axis. Spindle microtubule dynamics and spindle elongation rates were also severely depressed in the mutants. The pattern and extent of cytoplasmic microtubule dynamics modulation through the cell cycle may reveal the minimum dynamic properties required to support growth. The ability to alter intrinsic microtubule dynamics and determine the in vivo phenotype of cells expressing the mutant tubulin provides a critical advance in assessing the dynamic requirements of an essential gene function.
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5

Rodionov, V. I., S. S. Lim, V. I. Gelfand, and G. G. Borisy. "Microtubule dynamics in fish melanophores." Journal of Cell Biology 126, no. 6 (September 15, 1994): 1455–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.126.6.1455.

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We have studied the dynamics of microtubules in black tetra (Gymnocorymbus ternetzi) melanophores to test the possible correlation of microtubule stability and intracellular particle transport. X-rhodamine-or caged fluorescein-conjugated tubulin were microinjected and visualized by fluorescence digital imaging using a cooled charge coupled device and videomicroscopy. Microtubule dynamics were evaluated by determining the time course of tubulin incorporation after pulse injection, by time lapse observation, and by quantitation of fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching and photoactivation. The time course experiments showed that the kinetics of incorporation of labeled tubulin into microtubules were similar for cells with aggregated or dispersed pigment with most microtubules becoming fully labeled within 15-20 min after injection. Quantitation by fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching and photoactivation confirmed that microtubule turnover was rapid in both states, t1/2 = 3.5 +/- 1.5 and 6.1 +/- 3.0 min for cells with aggregated and dispersed pigment, respectively. In addition, immunostaining with antibodies specific to posttranslationally modified alpha-tubulin, which is usually enriched in stable microtubules, showed that microtubules composed exclusively of detyrosinated tubulin were absent and microtubules containing acetylated tubulin were sparse. We conclude that the microtubules of melanophores are very dynamic, that their dynamic properties do not depend critically on the state of pigment distribution, and that their stabilization is not a prerequisite for intracellular transport.
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6

Vorobjev, I. A., T. M. Svitkina, and G. G. Borisy. "Cytoplasmic assembly of microtubules in cultured cells." Journal of Cell Science 110, no. 21 (November 1, 1997): 2635–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.110.21.2635.

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The origin of non-centrosomal microtubules was investigated in a variety of animal cells in culture by means of time-lapse digital fluorescence microscopy. A previous study (Keating et al. (1997) Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 94, 5078–5083) demonstrated a pathway for formation of non-centrosomal microtubules by release from the centrosome. Here we show a parallel pathway not dependent upon the centrosome. Correlative immunostaining with anti-tubulin antibodies and electron microscopy established that apparent free microtubules observed in vivo were not growing ends of long stable microtubules. Free microtubules appeared spontaneously in the cytoplasm and occasionally by breakage of long microtubules. Estimates of the frequencies of free microtubule formation suggest that it can be a relatively common rather than exceptional event in PtK1 cells and may represent a significant source of non-centrosomal microtubules. The observation of free microtubules permitted analysis of the microtubule minus end. Unlike the plus end which showed dynamic instability, the minus end was stable or depolymerized. Breakage of long microtubules generated nascent plus and minus ends; the nascent minus end was generally stable while the plus end was always dynamic. The stability of microtubule minus ends in vivo apparently provides the necessary condition for free microtubule formation in the cytoplasm. Parameters of the dynamic instability of plus ends of free microtubules were similar to those for the distal ends of long microtubules, indicating that the free microtubules were not exceptional in their dynamic behavior. Random walk analysis of microtubule end dynamics gave apparent diffusion coefficients for free and long microtubules which permitted an estimate of turnover half-times. The results support the concept that, in PtK1 cells, a pathway other than plus end dynamics is needed to account for the rapidity of microtubule turnover.
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7

Cassimeris, L. U., P. Wadsworth, and E. D. Salmon. "Dynamics of microtubule depolymerization in monocytes." Journal of Cell Biology 102, no. 6 (June 1, 1986): 2023–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.102.6.2023.

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Human monocytes, which contain few interphase microtubules (35.+/- 7.7), were used to study the dynamics of microtubule depolymerization. Steady-state microtubule assembly was abruptly blocked with either high concentrations of nocodazole (10 micrograms/ml) or exposure to cold temperature (3 degrees C). At various times after inhibition of assembly, cells were processed for anti-tubulin immunofluorescence microscopy. Stained cells were observed with an intensified video camera attached to the fluorescence microscope. A tracing of the entire length of each individual microtubule was made from the image on the television monitor by focusing up and down through the cell. The tracings were then digitized into a computer. All microtubules were seen to originate from the centrosome, with an average length in control cells of 7.1 +/- 2.7 microns (n = 957 microtubules). During depolymerization, the total microtubule polymer and the number of microtubules per cell decreased rapidly. In contrast, there was a slow decrease in the average length of the persisting microtubules. The half-time for both the loss of total microtubule polymer and microtubule number per cell was approximately 40 s for nocodazole-treated cells. The rate-limiting step in the depolymerization process was the rate of initiation of disassembly. Once initiated, depolymerization appeared catastrophic. Further kinetic analysis revealed two classes of microtubules: 70% of the microtubule population was very labile and initiated depolymerization at a rate approximately 23 times faster than a minor population of persistent microtubules. Cold treatment yielded qualitatively similar characteristics of depolymerization, but the initiation rates were slower. In both cases there was a significant asynchrony and heterogeneity in the initiation of depolymerization among the population of microtubules.
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8

Kosco, Karena A., Chad G. Pearson, Paul S. Maddox, Peijing Jeremy Wang, Ian R. Adams, E. D. Salmon, Kerry Bloom, and Tim C. Huffaker. "Control of Microtubule Dynamics by Stu2p Is Essential for Spindle Orientation and Metaphase Chromosome Alignment in Yeast." Molecular Biology of the Cell 12, no. 9 (September 2001): 2870–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.12.9.2870.

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Stu2p is a member of a conserved family of microtubule-binding proteins and an essential protein in yeast. Here, we report the first in vivo analysis of microtubule dynamics in cells lacking a member of this protein family. For these studies, we have used a conditional Stu2p depletion strain expressing α-tubulin fused to green fluorescent protein. Depletion of Stu2p leads to fewer and less dynamic cytoplasmic microtubules in both G1 and preanaphase cells. The reduction in cytoplasmic microtubule dynamics is due primarily to decreases in both the catastrophe and rescue frequencies and an increase in the fraction of time microtubules spend pausing. These changes have significant consequences for the cell because they impede the ability of cytoplasmic microtubules to orient the spindle. In addition, recovery of fluorescence after photobleaching indicates that kinetochore microtubules are no longer dynamic in the absence of Stu2p. This deficiency is correlated with a failure to properly align chromosomes at metaphase. Overall, we provide evidence that Stu2p promotes the dynamics of microtubule plus-ends in vivo and that these dynamics are critical for microtubule interactions with kinetochores and cortical sites in the cytoplasm.
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9

Hyman, A. A., and T. J. Mitchison. "Modulation of microtubule stability by kinetochores in vitro." Journal of Cell Biology 110, no. 5 (May 1, 1990): 1607–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.110.5.1607.

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The interface between kinetochores and microtubules in the mitotic spindle is known to be dynamic. Kinetochore microtubules can both polymerize and depolymerize, and their dynamic behavior is intimately related to chromosome movement. In this paper we investigate the influence of kinetochores on the inherent dynamic behavior of microtubules using an in vitro assay. The dynamics of microtubule plus ends attached to kinetochores are compared to those of free plus ends in the same solution. We show that microtubules attached to kinetochores exhibit the full range of dynamic instability behavior, but at altered transition rates. Surprisingly, we find that kinetochores increase the rate at which microtubule ends transit from growing to shrinking. This result contradicts our previous findings (Mitchison, T. J., and M. W. Kirschner, 1985b) for technical reasons which are discussed. We suggest that catalysis of the growing to shrinking transition by kinetochores may account for selective depolymerization of kinetochore microtubules during anaphase in vivo. We also investigate the effects of a nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue on kinetochore microtubule dynamics. We find that 5' adenylylimido diphosphate induces a rigor state at the kinetochore-microtubule interface, which prevents depolymerization of the microtubule.
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10

Warren, James C., Adam Rutkowski, and Lynne Cassimeris. "Infection with Replication-deficient Adenovirus Induces Changes in the Dynamic Instability of Host Cell Microtubules." Molecular Biology of the Cell 17, no. 8 (August 2006): 3557–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e05-09-0850.

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Adenovirus translocation to the nucleus occurs through a well characterized minus end-directed transport along microtubules. Here, we show that the adenovirus infection process has a significant impact on the stability and dynamic behavior of host cell microtubules. Adenovirus-infected cells had elevated levels of acetylated and detyrosinated microtubules compared with uninfected cells. The accumulation of modified microtubules within adenovirus-infected cells required active RhoA. Adenovirus-induced changes in microtubule dynamics were characterized at the centrosome and at the cell periphery in living cells. Adenovirus infection resulted in a transient enhancement of centrosomal microtubule nucleation frequency. At the periphery of adenovirus-infected cells, the dynamic instability of microtubules plus ends shifted toward net growth, compared with the nearly balanced growth and shortening observed in uninfected cells. In infected cells, microtubules spent more time in growth, less time in shortening, and underwent catastrophes less frequently compared with those in uninfected cells. Drug-induced inhibition of Rac1 prevented most of these virus-induced shifts in microtubule dynamic instability. These results demonstrate that adenovirus infection induces a significant stabilizing effect on host cell microtubule dynamics, which involve, but are not limited to, the activation of the RhoGTPases RhoA and Rac1.
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11

Tirnauer, Jennifer S., Eileen O'Toole, Lisbeth Berrueta, Barbara E. Bierer, and David Pellman. "Yeast Bim1p Promotes the G1-specific Dynamics of Microtubules." Journal of Cell Biology 145, no. 5 (May 31, 1999): 993–1007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.145.5.993.

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Microtubule dynamics vary during the cell cycle, and microtubules appear to be more dynamic in vivo than in vitro. Proteins that promote dynamic instability are therefore central to microtubule behavior in living cells. Here, we report that a yeast protein of the highly conserved EB1 family, Bim1p, promotes cytoplasmic microtubule dynamics specifically during G1. During G1, microtubules in cells lacking BIM1 showed reduced dynamicity due to a slower shrinkage rate, fewer rescues and catastrophes, and more time spent in an attenuated/paused state. Human EB1 was identified as an interacting partner for the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) tumor suppressor protein. Like human EB1, Bim1p localizes to dots at the distal ends of cytoplasmic microtubules. This localization, together with data from electron microscopy and a synthetic interaction with the gene encoding the kinesin Kar3p, suggests that Bim1p acts at the microtubule plus end. Our in vivo data provide evidence of a cell cycle–specific microtubule-binding protein that promotes microtubule dynamicity.
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12

Stehbens, Samantha, and Torsten Wittmann. "Targeting and transport: How microtubules control focal adhesion dynamics." Journal of Cell Biology 198, no. 4 (August 20, 2012): 481–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201206050.

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Directional cell migration requires force generation that relies on the coordinated remodeling of interactions with the extracellular matrix (ECM), which is mediated by integrin-based focal adhesions (FAs). Normal FA turnover requires dynamic microtubules, and three members of the diverse group of microtubule plus-end-tracking proteins are principally involved in mediating microtubule interactions with FAs. Microtubules also alter the assembly state of FAs by modulating Rho GTPase signaling, and recent evidence suggests that microtubule-mediated clathrin-dependent and -independent endocytosis regulates FA dynamics. In addition, FA-associated microtubules may provide a polarized microtubule track for localized secretion of matrix metalloproteases (MMPs). Thus, different aspects of the molecular mechanisms by which microtubules control FA turnover in migrating cells are beginning to emerge.
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13

Mandelkow, E. M., E. Mandelkow, and R. A. Milligan. "Microtubule dynamics and microtubule caps: a time-resolved cryo-electron microscopy study." Journal of Cell Biology 114, no. 5 (September 1, 1991): 977–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.114.5.977.

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Microtubules display the unique property of dynamic instability characterized by phase changes between growth and shrinkage, even in constant environmental conditions. The phases can be synchronized, leading to bulk oscillations of microtubules. To study the structural basis of dynamic instability we have examined growing, shrinking, and oscillating microtubules by time-resolved cryo-EM. In particular we have addressed three questions which are currently a matter of debate: (a) What is the relationship between microtubules, tubulin subunits, and tubulin oligomers in microtubule dynamics?; (b) How do microtubules shrink? By release of subunits or via oligomers?; and (c) Is there a conformational change at microtubule ends during the transitions from growth to shrinkage and vice versa? The results show that (a) oscillating microtubules coexist with a substantial fraction of oligomers, even at a maximum of microtubule assembly; (b) microtubules disassemble primarily into oligomers; and (c) the ends of growing microtubules have straight protofilaments, shrinking microtubules have protofilaments coiled inside out. This is interpreted as a transition from a tense to a relaxed conformation which could be used to perform work, as suggested by some models of poleward chromosome movement during anaphase.
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14

Saoudi, Yasmina, Rati Fotedar, Ariane Abrieu, Marcel Dorée, Jürgen Wehland, Robert L. Margolis, and Didier Job. "Stepwise Reconstitution of Interphase Microtubule Dynamics in Permeabilized Cells and Comparison to Dynamic Mechanisms in Intact Cells." Journal of Cell Biology 142, no. 6 (September 21, 1998): 1519–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.142.6.1519.

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Microtubules in permeabilized cells are devoid of dynamic activity and are insensitive to depolymerizing drugs such as nocodazole. Using this model system we have established conditions for stepwise reconstitution of microtubule dynamics in permeabilized interphase cells when supplemented with various cell extracts. When permeabilized cells are supplemented with mammalian cell extracts in the presence of protein phosphatase inhibitors, microtubules become sensitive to nocodazole. Depolymerization induced by nocodazole proceeds from microtubule plus ends, whereas microtubule minus ends remain inactive. Such nocodazole-sensitive microtubules do not exhibit subunit turnover. By contrast, when permeabilized cells are supplemented with Xenopus egg extracts, microtubules actively turn over. This involves continuous creation of free microtubule minus ends through microtubule fragmentation. Newly created minus ends apparently serve as sites of microtubule depolymerization, while net microtubule polymerization occurs at microtubule plus ends. We provide evidence that similar microtubule fragmentation and minus end–directed disassembly occur at the whole-cell level in intact cells. These data suggest that microtubule dynamics resembling dynamics observed in vivo can be reconstituted in permeabilized cells. This model system should provide means for in vitro assays to identify molecules important in regulating microtubule dynamics. Furthermore, our data support recent work suggesting that microtubule treadmilling is an important mechanism of microtubule turnover.
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15

Hyman, A. A., S. Salser, D. N. Drechsel, N. Unwin, and T. J. Mitchison. "Role of GTP hydrolysis in microtubule dynamics: information from a slowly hydrolyzable analogue, GMPCPP." Molecular Biology of the Cell 3, no. 10 (October 1992): 1155–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.3.10.1155.

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The role of GTP hydrolysis in microtubule dynamics has been reinvestigated using an analogue of GTP, guanylyl-(alpha, beta)-methylene-diphosphonate (GMPCPP). This analogue binds to the tubulin exchangeable nucleotide binding site (E-site) with an affinity four to eightfold lower than GTP and promotes the polymerization of normal microtubules. The polymerization rate of microtubules with GMPCPP-tubulin is very similar to that of GTP-tubulin. However, in contrast to microtubules polymerized with GTP, GMPCPP-microtubules do not depolymerize rapidly after isothermal dilution. The depolymerization rate of GMPCPP-microtubules is 0.1 s-1 compared with 500 s-1 for GDP-microtubules. GMPCPP also completely suppresses dynamic instability. Contrary to previous work, we find that the beta--gamma bond of GMPCPP is hydrolyzed extremely slowly after incorporation into the microtubule lattice, with a rate constant of 4 x 10(-7) s-1. Because GMPCPP hydrolysis is negligible over the course of a polymerization experiment, it can be used to test the role of hydrolysis in microtubule dynamics. Our results provide strong new evidence for the idea that GTP hydrolysis by tubulin is not required for normal polymerization but is essential for depolymerization and thus for dynamic instability. Because GMPCPP strongly promotes spontaneous nucleation of microtubules, we propose that GTP hydrolysis by tubulin also plays the important biological role of inhibiting spontaneous microtubule nucleation.
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16

Wadsworth, P., and M. McGrail. "Interphase microtubule dynamics are cell type-specific." Journal of Cell Science 95, no. 1 (January 1, 1990): 23–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.95.1.23.

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The rate and pattern of microtubule polymer loss in interphase cells have been examined using nocodazole to block microtubule assembly. Cells were incubated with high concentrations of nocodazole for various times and the pattern of microtubule disassembly was determined using tubulin immunofluorescence. Polymer loss was quantitated by measuring the decrease in percentage of cell area occupied by microtubules. The results demonstrate that microtubules in diverse cells disassemble individually and asynchronously. In addition, these quantitative measurements reveal that epithelial and fibroblast cells display strikingly different kinetics of polymer loss. In fibroblasts, polymer loss is rapid, with a half-time of 4 min at 37 degrees C. In epithelial cells, loss of 60% of the microtubules occurs with a half-time of 18 min; the remaining 40% of the microtubules disassemble much more slowly (average half-time of 72 min). To demonstrate that these differences were not due to species differences among various cells assayed in these experiments, epithelial and fibroblast cells derived from primary cultures of newt lung have been examined. Again, fibroblast and epithelial cell microtubule dynamics could be readily distinguished. To determine if modifications to epithelial cell microtubules contribute to their stability, microtubules were completely disassembled and allowed to regrow. The rate of polymer loss for recently regrown microtubules was more rapid than microtubules in control cells, indicating that stability increases with time after assembly.
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17

Dhamodharan, R., M. A. Jordan, D. Thrower, L. Wilson, and P. Wadsworth. "Vinblastine suppresses dynamics of individual microtubules in living interphase cells." Molecular Biology of the Cell 6, no. 9 (September 1995): 1215–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.6.9.1215.

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We have characterized the effects of vinblastine on the dynamic instability behavior of individual microtubules in living BS-C-1 cells microinjected with rhodamine-labeled tubulin and have found that at low concentrations (3-64 nM), vinblastine potently suppresses dynamic instability without causing net microtubule depolymerization. Vinblastine suppressed the rates of microtubule growth and shortening, and decreased the frequency of transitions from growth or pause to shortening, also called catastrophe. In vinblastine-treated cells, both the average duration of a pause (a state of attenuated dynamics where neither growth nor shortening could be detected) and the percentage of total time spent in pause were significantly increased. Vinblastine potently decreased dynamicity, a measure of the overall dynamic activity of microtubules, reducing this parameter by 75% at 32 nM. The present work, consistent with earlier in vitro studies, demonstrates that vinblastine kinetically caps the ends of microtubules in living cells and supports the hypothesis that the potent chemotherapeutic action of vinblastine as an antitumor drug is suppression of mitotic spindle microtubule dynamics. Further, the results indicate that molecules that bind to microtubule ends can regulate microtubule dynamic behavior in living cells and suggest that endogenous regulators of microtubule dynamics that work by similar mechanisms may exist in living cells.
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Kuo, Yin-Wei, Olivier Trottier, Mohammed Mahamdeh, and Jonathon Howard. "Spastin is a dual-function enzyme that severs microtubules and promotes their regrowth to increase the number and mass of microtubules." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116, no. 12 (March 5, 2019): 5533–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1818824116.

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The remodeling of the microtubule cytoskeleton underlies dynamic cellular processes, such as mitosis, ciliogenesis, and neuronal morphogenesis. An important class of microtubule remodelers comprises the severases—spastin, katanin, and fidgetin—which cut microtubules into shorter fragments. While severing activity might be expected to break down the microtubule cytoskeleton, inhibiting these enzymes in vivo actually decreases, rather increases, the number of microtubules, suggesting that severases have a nucleation-like activity. To resolve this paradox, we reconstitutedDrosophilaspastin in a dynamic microtubule assay and discovered that it is a dual-function enzyme. In addition to its ATP-dependent severing activity, spastin is an ATP-independent regulator of microtubule dynamics that slows shrinkage and increases rescue. We observed that spastin accumulates at shrinking ends; this increase in spastin concentration may underlie the increase in rescue frequency and the slowdown in shortening. The changes in microtubule dynamics promote microtubule regrowth so that severed microtubule fragments grow, leading to an increase in the number and mass of microtubules. A mathematical model shows that spastin’s effect on microtubule dynamics is essential for this nucleation-like activity: spastin switches microtubules into a state where the net flux of tubulin onto each polymer is positive, leading to the observed exponential increase in microtubule mass. This increase in the microtubule mass accounts for spastin’s in vivo phenotypes.
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19

Rothwell, S. W., W. A. Grasser, H. N. Baker, and D. B. Murphy. "The relative contributions of polymer annealing and subunit exchange to microtubule dynamics in vitro." Journal of Cell Biology 105, no. 2 (August 1, 1987): 863–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.105.2.863.

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Microtubules that are free of microtubule-associated protein undergo dynamic changes at steady state, becoming longer but fewer in number with time through a process which was previously assumed to be based entirely on mechanisms of subunit exchange at polymer ends. However, we recently demonstrated that brain and erythrocyte microtubules are capable of joining end-to-end and suggested that polymer annealing may also affect the dynamic behavior of microtubules in vitro (Rothwell, S. W., W. A. Grasser, and D. B. Murphy, 1986, J. Cell Biol. 102:619-627). In the present study, we first show that annealing is a general property of cytoplasmic microtubules and is not a specialized characteristic of erythrocyte microtubules by documenting annealing between tryosinolated and detyrosinolated brain microtubules. We then examine the contributions of polymer annealing and subunit exchange to microtubule dynamics by analyzing the composition and length of individual polymers in a mixture of brain and erythrocyte microtubules by immunoelectron microscopy. In concentrated preparations of short-length microtubules at polymer-mass steady state, annealing was observed to be the principal factor responsible for the increase in polymer length, whereas annealing and subunit exchange contributed about equally to the reduction in microtubule number.
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20

Tanaka, E., T. Ho, and M. W. Kirschner. "The role of microtubule dynamics in growth cone motility and axonal growth." Journal of Cell Biology 128, no. 1 (January 1, 1995): 139–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.128.1.139.

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The growth cone contains dynamic and relatively stable microtubule populations, whose function in motility and axonal growth is uncharacterized. We have used vinblastine at low doses to inhibit microtubule dynamics without appreciable depolymerization to probe the role of these dynamics in growth cone behavior. At doses of vinblastine that interfere only with dynamics, the forward and persistent movement of the growth cone is inhibited and the growth cone wanders without appreciable forward translocation; it quickly resumes forward growth after the vinblastine is washed out. Direct visualization of fluorescently tagged microtubules in these neurons shows that in the absence of dynamic microtubules, the remaining mass of polymer does not invade the peripheral lamella and does not undergo the usual cycle of bundling and splaying and the growth cone stops forward movement. These experiments argue for a role for dynamic microtubules in allowing microtubule rearrangements in the growth cone. These rearrangements seem to be necessary for microtubule bundling, the subsequent coalescence of the cortex around the bundle to form new axon, and forward translocation of the growth cone.
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21

Yamamoto, Ayumu, Chihiro Tsutsumi, Hiroaki Kojima, Kazuhiro Oiwa, and Yasushi Hiraoka. "Dynamic Behavior of Microtubules during Dynein-dependent Nuclear Migrations of Meiotic Prophase in Fission Yeast." Molecular Biology of the Cell 12, no. 12 (December 2001): 3933–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.12.12.3933.

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During meiotic prophase in fission yeast, the nucleus migrates back and forth between the two ends of the cell, led by the spindle pole body (SPB). This nuclear oscillation is dependent on astral microtubules radiating from the SPB and a microtubule motor, cytoplasmic dynein. Here we have examined the dynamic behavior of astral microtubules labeled with the green fluorescent protein during meiotic prophase with the use of optical sectioning microscopy. During nuclear migrations, the SPB mostly follows the microtubules that extend toward the cell cortex. SPB migrations start when these microtubules interact with the cortex and stop when they disappear, suggesting that these microtubules drive nuclear migrations. The microtubules that are followed by the SPB often slide along the cortex and are shortened by disassembly at their ends proximal to the cortex. In dynein-mutant cells, where nuclear oscillations are absent, the SPB never migrates by following microtubules, and microtubule assembly/disassembly dynamics is significantly altered. Based on these observations, together with the frequent accumulation of dynein at a cortical site where the directing microtubules interact, we propose a model in which dynein drives nuclear oscillation by mediating cortical microtubule interactions and regulating the dynamics of microtubule disassembly at the cortex.
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22

Schulze, E., and M. Kirschner. "Microtubule dynamics in interphase cells." Journal of Cell Biology 102, no. 3 (March 1, 1986): 1020–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.102.3.1020.

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The sites of microtubule growth and the kinetics of elongation have been studied in vivo by microinjection of biotin-labeled tubulin and subsequent visualization with immunocytochemical probes. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy demonstrate that injected biotin-labeled subunits are incorporated into new segments of growth which are contiguous with unlabeled microtubules. Rapid incorporation occurs by elongation of existing microtubules and new nucleation off the centrosome. The growth rate is 3.6 micron/min and is independent of the concentration of injected labeled tubulin. This rate of incorporation together with turnover of existing microtubules leads to approximately 80% exchange in 15 min. The observed kinetics and pattern of microtubule turnover allow for an evaluation of the relevance of several in vitro models for steady-state dynamics to the in vivo situation. We have also observed a substantial population of quasi-stable microtubules that does not exchange subunits as rapidly as the majority of microtubules and may have specialized functions in the cell.
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23

Carminati, Janet L., and Tim Stearns. "Microtubules Orient the Mitotic Spindle in Yeast through Dynein-dependent Interactions with the Cell Cortex." Journal of Cell Biology 138, no. 3 (August 11, 1997): 629–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.138.3.629.

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Proper orientation of the mitotic spindle is critical for successful cell division in budding yeast. To investigate the mechanism of spindle orientation, we used a green fluorescent protein (GFP)–tubulin fusion protein to observe microtubules in living yeast cells. GFP–tubulin is incorporated into microtubules, allowing visualization of both cytoplasmic and spindle microtubules, and does not interfere with normal microtubule function. Microtubules in yeast cells exhibit dynamic instability, although they grow and shrink more slowly than microtubules in animal cells. The dynamic properties of yeast microtubules are modulated during the cell cycle. The behavior of cytoplasmic microtubules revealed distinct interactions with the cell cortex that result in associated spindle movement and orientation. Dynein-mutant cells had defects in these cortical interactions, resulting in misoriented spindles. In addition, microtubule dynamics were altered in the absence of dynein. These results indicate that microtubules and dynein interact to produce dynamic cortical interactions, and that these interactions result in the force driving spindle orientation.
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24

Ciani, Lorenza, Olga Krylova, Matthew J. Smalley, Trevor C. Dale, and Patricia C. Salinas. "A divergent canonical WNT-signaling pathway regulates microtubule dynamics." Journal of Cell Biology 164, no. 2 (January 19, 2004): 243–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200309096.

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Dishevelled (DVL) is associated with axonal microtubules and regulates microtubule stability through the inhibition of the serine/threonine kinase, glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK-3β). In the canonical WNT pathway, the negative regulator Axin forms a complex with β-catenin and GSK-3β, resulting in β-catenin degradation. Inhibition of GSK-3β by DVL increases β-catenin stability and TCF transcriptional activation. Here, we show that Axin associates with microtubules and unexpectedly stabilizes microtubules through DVL. In turn, DVL stabilizes microtubules by inhibiting GSK-3β through a transcription- and β-catenin–independent pathway. More importantly, axonal microtubules are stabilized after DVL localizes to axons. Increased microtubule stability is correlated with a decrease in GSK-3β–mediated phosphorylation of MAP-1B. We propose a model in which Axin, through DVL, stabilizes microtubules by inhibiting a pool of GSK-3β, resulting in local changes in the phosphorylation of cellular targets. Our data indicate a bifurcation in the so-called canonical WNT-signaling pathway to regulate microtubule stability.
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25

Sharma, Neeraj, Jessica Bryant, Dorota Wloga, Rachel Donaldson, Richard C. Davis, Maria Jerka-Dziadosz, and Jacek Gaertig. "Katanin regulates dynamics of microtubules and biogenesis of motile cilia." Journal of Cell Biology 178, no. 6 (September 10, 2007): 1065–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200704021.

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The in vivo significance of microtubule severing and the mechanisms governing its spatial regulation are not well understood. In Tetrahymena, a cell type with elaborate microtubule arrays, we engineered null mutations in subunits of the microtubule-severing complex, katanin. We show that katanin activity is essential. The net effect of katanin on the polymer mass depends on the microtubule type and location. Although katanin reduces the polymer mass and destabilizes the internal network of microtubules, its activity increases the mass of ciliary microtubules. We also show that katanin reduces the levels of several types of post-translational modifications on tubulin of internal and cortical microtubules. Furthermore, katanin deficiencies phenocopy a mutation of β-tubulin that prevents deposition of polymodifications (glutamylation and glycylation) on microtubules. We propose that katanin preferentially severs older, post-translationally modified segments of microtubules.
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26

Hunter, A. W., and L. Wordeman. "How motor proteins influence microtubule polymerization dynamics." Journal of Cell Science 113, no. 24 (December 15, 2000): 4379–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.113.24.4379.

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The interplay between microtubules and microtubule-based motors is fundamental to basic aspects of cellular function, such as the intracellular transport of organelles and alterations in cellular morphology during cell locomotion and division. Motor proteins are unique in that they couple nucleotide hydrolysis to force production that can do work. The force transduction by proteins belonging to the kinesin and dynein superfamilies has been thought only to power movement of these motors along the surface of microtubules; however, a growing body of evidence, both genetic and biochemical, suggests that motors can also directly influence the polymerization dynamics of microtubules. For example, at the vertebrate kinetochore, motors interact directly with microtubule ends and modulate polymerization dynamics to orchestrate chromosome movements during mitosis. Although a role for motors in regulating microtubule length has been established, the mechanisms used by motors to promote microtubule growth or shrinkage are unclear, as is an understanding of why cells might choose motors to control dynamics rather than a variety of non-motor proteins known to affect microtubule stability. Elucidation of the exact mechanisms by which motors alter the exchange of tubulin subunits at microtubule ends in vitro may shed light on how microtubule stability is regulated to produce the array of dynamic behavior seen in cells.
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27

Rizk, Rania S., Kevin P. Bohannon, Laura A. Wetzel, James Powers, Sidney L. Shaw, and Claire E. Walczak. "MCAK and Paclitaxel Have Differential Effects on Spindle Microtubule Organization and Dynamics." Molecular Biology of the Cell 20, no. 6 (March 15, 2009): 1639–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e08-09-0985.

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Within the mitotic spindle, there are multiple populations of microtubules with different turnover dynamics, but how these different dynamics are maintained is not fully understood. MCAK is a member of the kinesin-13 family of microtubule-destabilizing enzymes that is required for proper establishment and maintenance of the spindle. Using quantitative immunofluorescence and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, we compared the differences in spindle organization caused by global suppression of microtubule dynamics, by treating cells with low levels of paclitaxel, versus specific perturbation of spindle microtubule subsets by MCAK inhibition. Paclitaxel treatment caused a disruption in spindle microtubule organization marked by a significant increase in microtubules near the poles and a reduction in K-fiber fluorescence intensity. This was correlated with a faster t1/2 of both spindle and K-fiber microtubules. In contrast, MCAK inhibition caused a dramatic reorganization of spindle microtubules with a significant increase in astral microtubules and reduction in K-fiber fluorescence intensity, which correlated with a slower t1/2 of K-fibers but no change in the t1/2 of spindle microtubules. Our data support the model that MCAK perturbs spindle organization by acting preferentially on a subset of microtubules, and they support the overall hypothesis that microtubule dynamics is differentially regulated in the spindle.
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28

Trinczek, B., A. Marx, E. M. Mandelkow, D. B. Murphy, and E. Mandelkow. "Dynamics of microtubules from erythrocyte marginal bands." Molecular Biology of the Cell 4, no. 3 (March 1993): 323–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.4.3.323.

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Microtubules can adjust their length by the mechanism of dynamic instability, that is by switching between phases of growth and shrinkage. Thus far this phenomenon has been studied with microtubules that contain several components, that is, a mixture of tubulin isoforms, with or without a mixture of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), which can act as regulators of dynamic instability. Here we concentrate on the influence of the tubulin component. We have studied MAP-free microtubules from the marginal band of avian erythrocytes and compared them with mammalian brain microtubules. The erythrocyte system was selected because it represents a naturally stable aggregate of microtubules; second, the tubulin is largely homogeneous, in contrast to brain tubulin. Qualitatively, erythrocyte microtubules show similar features as brain microtubules, but they were found to be much less dynamic. The critical concentration of elongation, and the rates of association and dissociation of tubulin are all lower than with brain microtubules. Catastrophes are rare, rescues frequent, and shrinkage slow. This means that dynamic instability can be controlled by the tubulin isotype, independently of MAPs. Moreover, the extent of dynamic behavior is highly dependent on buffer conditions. In particular, dynamic instability is strongly enhanced in phosphate buffer, both for erythrocyte marginal band and brain microtubules. The lower stability in phosphate buffer argues against the hypothesis that a cap of tubulin.GDP.Pi subunits stabilizes microtubules. The difference in dynamics between tubulin isotypes and between the two ends of microtubules is preserved in the different buffer systems.
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29

Nakajima, Yuko, Anthony Cormier, Randall G. Tyers, Adrianne Pigula, Yutian Peng, David G. Drubin, and Georjana Barnes. "Ipl1/Aurora-dependent phosphorylation of Sli15/INCENP regulates CPC–spindle interaction to ensure proper microtubule dynamics." Journal of Cell Biology 194, no. 1 (July 4, 2011): 137–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201009137.

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Dynamic microtubules facilitate chromosome arrangement before anaphase, whereas during anaphase microtubule stability assists chromosome separation. Changes in microtubule dynamics at the metaphase–anaphase transition are regulated by Cdk1. Cdk1-mediated phosphorylation of Sli15/INCENP promotes preanaphase microtubule dynamics by preventing chromosomal passenger complex (CPC; Sli15/INCENP, Bir1/Survivin, Nbl1/Borealin, Ipl1/Aurora) association with spindles. However, whether Cdk1 has sole control over microtubule dynamics, and how CPC–microtubule association influences microtubule behavior, are unclear. Here, we show that Ipl1/Aurora-dependent phosphorylation of Sli15/INCENP modulates microtubule dynamics by preventing CPC binding to the preanaphase spindle and to the central spindle until late anaphase, facilitating spatiotemporal control of microtubule dynamics required for proper metaphase centromere positioning and anaphase spindle elongation. Decreased Ipl1-dependent Sli15 phosphorylation drives direct CPC binding to microtubules, revealing how the CPC influences microtubule dynamics. We propose that Cdk1 and Ipl1/Aurora cooperatively modulate microtubule dynamics and that Ipl1/Aurora-dependent phosphorylation of Sli15 controls spindle function by excluding the CPC from spindle regions engaged in microtubule polymerization.
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30

Li, Wenjing, Tomohiro Miki, Takashi Watanabe, Mai Kakeno, Ikuko Sugiyama, Kozo Kaibuchi, and Gohta Goshima. "EB1 promotes microtubule dynamics by recruiting Sentin in Drosophila cells." Journal of Cell Biology 193, no. 6 (June 6, 2011): 973–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201101108.

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Highly conserved EB1 family proteins bind to the growing ends of microtubules, recruit multiple cargo proteins, and are critical for making dynamic microtubules in vivo. However, it is unclear how these master regulators of microtubule plus ends promote microtubule dynamics. In this paper, we identify a novel EB1 cargo protein, Sentin. Sentin depletion in Drosophila melanogaster S2 cells, similar to EB1 depletion, resulted in an increase in microtubule pausing and led to the formation of shorter spindles, without displacing EB1 from growing microtubules. We demonstrate that Sentin’s association with EB1 was critical for its plus end localization and function. Furthermore, the EB1 phenotype was rescued by expressing an EBN-Sentin fusion protein in which the C-terminal cargo-binding region of EB1 is replaced with Sentin. Knockdown of Sentin attenuated plus end accumulation of Msps (mini spindles), the orthologue of XMAP215 microtubule polymerase. These results indicate that EB1 promotes dynamic microtubule behavior by recruiting the cargo protein Sentin and possibly also a microtubule polymerase to the microtubule tip.
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31

Shaw, Sidney L., Elaine Yeh, Paul Maddox, E. D. Salmon, and Kerry Bloom. "Astral Microtubule Dynamics in Yeast: A Microtubule-based Searching Mechanism for Spindle Orientation and Nuclear Migration into the Bud." Journal of Cell Biology 139, no. 4 (November 17, 1997): 985–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.139.4.985.

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Localization of dynein–green fluorescent protein (GFP) to cytoplasmic microtubules allowed us to obtain one of the first views of the dynamic properties of astral microtubules in live budding yeast. Several novel aspects of microtubule function were revealed by time-lapse, three-dimensional fluorescence microscopy. Astral microtubules, about four to six in number for each pole, exhibited asynchronous dynamic instability throughout the cell cycle, growing at ≅0.3–1.5 μm/min toward the cell surface then switching to shortening at similar velocities back to the spindle pole body (SPB). During interphase, a conical array of microtubules trailed the SPB as the nucleus traversed the cytoplasm. Microtubule disassembly by nocodozole inhibited these movements, indicating that the nucleus was pushed around the interior of the cell via dynamic astral microtubules. These forays were evident in unbudded G1 cells, as well as in late telophase cells after spindle disassembly. Nuclear movement and orientation to the bud neck in S/G2 or G2/M was dependent on dynamic astral microtubules growing into the bud. The SPB and nucleus were then pulled toward the bud neck, and further microtubule growth from that SPB was mainly oriented toward the bud. After SPB separation and central spindle formation, a temporal delay in the acquisition of cytoplasmic dynein at one of the spindle poles was evident. Stable microtubule interactions with the cell cortex were rarely observed during anaphase, and did not appear to contribute significantly to spindle alignment or elongation into the bud. Alterations of microtubule dynamics, as observed in cells overexpressing dynein-GFP, resulted in eventual spindle misalignment. These studies provide the first mechanistic basis for understanding how spindle orientation and nuclear positioning are established and are indicative of a microtubule-based searching mechanism that requires dynamic microtubules for nuclear migration into the bud.
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32

Walczak, Claire E., Hailing Zong, Sachin Jain, and Jane R. Stout. "Spatial regulation of astral microtubule dynamics by Kif18B in PtK cells." Molecular Biology of the Cell 27, no. 20 (October 15, 2016): 3021–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e16-04-0254.

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The spatial and temporal control of microtubule dynamics is fundamentally important for proper spindle assembly and chromosome segregation. This is achieved, in part, by the multitude of proteins that bind to and regulate spindle microtubules, including kinesin superfamily members, which act as microtubule-destabilizing enzymes. These fall into two general classes: the kinesin-13 proteins, which directly depolymerize microtubules, and the kinesin-8 proteins, which are plus end–directed motors that either destabilize microtubules or cap the microtubule plus ends. Here we analyze the contribution of a PtK kinesin-8 protein, Kif18B, in the control of mitotic microtubule dynamics. Knockdown of Kif18B causes defects in spindle microtubule organization and a dramatic increase in astral microtubules. Kif18B-knockdown cells had defects in chromosome alignment, but there were no defects in chromosome segregation. The long astral microtubules that occur in the absence of Kif18B are limited in length by the cell cortex. Using EB1 tracking, we show that Kif18B activity is spatially controlled, as loss of Kif18B has the most dramatic effect on the lifetimes of astral microtubules that extend toward the cell cortex. Together our studies provide new insight into how diverse kinesins contribute to spatial microtubule organization in the spindle.
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33

Italiano, Joseph E., Jennifer L. Richardson, Harald Schulze, Ksenija Drabek, Chloe Bulinski, Niels Galjart, Ramesh A. Shivdasani, John H. Hartwig, and Sunita R. Patel. "The Marginal Microtubule Coil in the Resting Blood Platelet Is a Dynamic Bipolar Array." Blood 106, no. 11 (November 16, 2005): 1653. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v106.11.1653.1653.

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Abstract The discoid shape of the resting blood platelet is maintained by its marginal microtubule band. Structural studies have concluded that this band is composed of a single microtubule coiled 8-12 times around the cell periphery. To understand the dynamics of the microtubule coil, we took advantage of EB1 and EB3, proteins that highlight the ends of growing microtubules. Immunofluorescence microscopy with anti-EB1 revealed clear staining of numerous (8.7 +/− 2.0, range 4–12) comet-like dashes in the microtubule coil, suggesting the presence of several microtubule plus ends. Consistent with this observation, rhodamine-tubulin added to permeabilized platelets incorporates at multiple (7.9 +/−1.9) points throughout the microtubule coil. To visualize microtubule dynamics in platelets, we retrovirally directed megakaryocytes to express the microtubule plus-end marker EB3-GFP and isolated platelets released in these cultures. Fluorescence time-lapse microscopy of EB3-GFP-expressing resting platelets revealed multiple microtubule plus ends that grew in both clockwise and counterclockwise directions. Antibodies that recognize tyrosinated tubulin, which preferentially label newly assembled microtubules and not stable microtubules, stain the microtubule coil. These results indicate that resting platelets contain a bipolar array of microtubules that undergoes continuous assembly. When EB3-GFP-expressing platelets are activated with thrombin, the number of polymerizing microtubules increases dramatically and the microtubules grow into filopodia. Collectively, these results suggest that the marginal band of the resting blood platelet is highly dynamic, bipolar, and contains multiple microtubule plus ends. These ends are amplified in platelet activation and point towards the active edges of the cells and the tips of filopodia.
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34

Farrell, KW, MA Jordan, HP Miller, and L. Wilson. "Phase dynamics at microtubule ends: the coexistence of microtubule length changes and treadmilling." Journal of Cell Biology 104, no. 4 (April 1, 1987): 1035–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.104.4.1035.

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The length dynamics both of microtubule-associated protein (MAP)-rich and MAP-depleted bovine brain microtubules were examined at polymer mass steady state. In both preparations, the microtubules exhibited length redistributions shortly after polymer mass steady state was attained. With time, however, both populations relaxed to a state in which no further changes in length distributions could be detected. Shearing the microtubules or diluting the microtubule suspensions transiently increased the extent to which microtubule length redistributions occurred, but again the microtubules relaxed to a state in which changes in the polymer length distributions were not detected. Under steady-state conditions of constant polymer mass and stable microtubule length distribution, both MAP-rich and MAP-depleted microtubules exhibited behavior consistent with treadmilling. MAPs strongly suppressed the magnitude of length redistributions and the steady-state treadmilling rates. These data indicate that the inherent tendency of microtubules in vitro is to relax to a steady state in which net changes in the microtubule length distributions are zero. If the basis of the observed length redistributions is the spontaneous loss and regain of GTP-tubulin ("GTP caps") at microtubule ends, then in order to account for stable length distributions the microtubule ends must reside in the capped state far longer than in the uncapped state, and uncapped microtubule ends must be rapidly recapped. The data suggest that microtubules in cells may have an inherent tendency to remain in the polymerized state, and that microtubule disassembly must be induced actively.
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35

Li, Huilin, Eva Nogales, and Kenneth H. Downing. "Mapping Binding Sites of Potential Anti-Cancer Drugs on Tubulin." Microscopy and Microanalysis 6, S2 (August 2000): 236–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1431927600033675.

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Microtubules are involved in many activities within the cell that require highly dynamic activity. For examples, microtubules can grow and shrink as they explore the cell, and the entire microtubule cytoskeleton is restructured as cells prepare for division. Interfering with microtubule dynamics can have serious consequences for the health of the cell, especially in cells that are rapidly dividing. The result of disrupting the normal dynamics is generally an interruption of the cell cycle and consequent induction of apoptosis. This behavior has been exploited with a number of anti-cancer drugs that target tubulin, the main protein in microtubules. Drugs are currently in use that either stabilize or destabilize microtubules. Among the most widely used is Taxol, one of the microtubule stabilizing drugs. Because Taxol produces a range of serious side effects and a substantial fraction of patients treated with Taxol eventually develop resistance to the drug, there is an active search for other drugs that might be more selective and less prone to resistance.
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36

Kim, Haein, Cindy Fonseca, and Jason Stumpff. "A unique kinesin-8 surface loop provides specificity for chromosome alignment." Molecular Biology of the Cell 25, no. 21 (November 2014): 3319–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e14-06-1132.

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Microtubule length control is essential for the assembly and function of the mitotic spindle. Kinesin-like motor proteins that directly attenuate microtubule dynamics make key contributions to this control, but the specificity of these motors for different subpopulations of spindle microtubules is not understood. Kif18A (kinesin-8) localizes to the plus ends of the relatively slowly growing kinetochore fibers (K-fibers) and attenuates their dynamics, whereas Kif4A (kinesin-4) localizes to mitotic chromatin and suppresses the growth of highly dynamic, nonkinetochore microtubules. Although Kif18A and Kif4A similarly suppress microtubule growth in vitro, it remains unclear whether microtubule-attenuating motors control the lengths of K-fibers and nonkinetochore microtubules through a common mechanism. To address this question, we engineered chimeric kinesins that contain the Kif4A, Kif18B (kinesin-8), or Kif5B (kinesin-1) motor domain fused to the C-terminal tail of Kif18A. Each of these chimeric kinesins localizes to K-fibers; however, K-fiber length control requires an activity specific to kinesin-8s. Mutational studies of Kif18A indicate that this control depends on both its C-terminus and a unique, positively charged surface loop, called loop2, within the motor domain. These data support a model in which microtubule-attenuating kinesins are molecularly “tuned” to control the dynamics of specific subsets of spindle microtubules.
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37

Brouhard, Gary J., and Luke M. Rice. "The contribution of αβ-tubulin curvature to microtubule dynamics." Journal of Cell Biology 207, no. 3 (November 10, 2014): 323–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201407095.

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Microtubules are dynamic polymers of αβ-tubulin that form diverse cellular structures, such as the mitotic spindle for cell division, the backbone of neurons, and axonemes. To control the architecture of microtubule networks, microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) and motor proteins regulate microtubule growth, shrinkage, and the transitions between these states. Recent evidence shows that many MAPs exert their effects by selectively binding to distinct conformations of polymerized or unpolymerized αβ-tubulin. The ability of αβ-tubulin to adopt distinct conformations contributes to the intrinsic polymerization dynamics of microtubules. αβ-Tubulin conformation is a fundamental property that MAPs monitor and control to build proper microtubule networks.
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38

Neumann, Tobias, Steffen O. Kirschstein, Juan A. Camacho Gomez, Leonhard Kittler, and Eberhard Unger. "Determination of the Net Exchange Rate of Tubulin Dimer in Steady-State Microtubules by Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy." Biological Chemistry 382, no. 3 (March 21, 2001): 387–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/bc.2001.047.

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Abstract The microtubule cytoskeleton plays an important role in eukaryotic cells, e. g., in cell movement or morphogenesis. Microtubules, formed by assembly of tubulin dimers, are dynamic polymers changing randomly between periods of growing and shortening, a property known as dynamic instability. Another process characterizing the dynamic behaviour is the socalled treadmilling due to different binding constants of tubulin at both microtubule ends. In this study, we used tetramethylrhodamine (TMR)labeled tubulin added to microtubule suspensions to determine the net exchange rate (NER) of tubulin dimers by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) as a measure for microtubule dynamics. This approach, which seems to be suitable as screening system to detect compounds influencing the NER of tubulin dimers into microtubules at steadystate, showed that taxol, nocodazole, colchicine, and vinblastine affect microtubule dynamics at concentrations as low as 10[-9] 10[-10] M.
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39

Sammak, P. J., G. J. Gorbsky, and G. G. Borisy. "Microtubule dynamics in vivo: a test of mechanisms of turnover." Journal of Cell Biology 104, no. 3 (March 1, 1987): 395–405. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.104.3.395.

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Clarification of the mechanism of microtubule dynamics requires an analysis of the microtubule pattern at two time points in the same cell with single fiber resolution. Single microtubule resolution was obtained by microinjection of haptenized tubulin (fluorescein-tubulin) and subsequent indirect immunofluorescence with an antifluorescein antibody. The two time points in a single cell were, first, the time of photobleaching fluorescein-tubulin, and second, the time of fixation. The pattern of fluorescence replacement in the bleached zone during this time interval revealed the relevant mechanisms. In fibroblasts, microtubule domains in the bleached zone are replaced microtubule by microtubule and not by mechanisms that affect all microtubules simultaneously. Of the models we consider, treadmilling and subunit exchange along the length do not account for this observation, but dynamic instability can since it suggests that growing and shrinking microtubules coexist. In addition, we show that the half-time for microtubule replacement is shortest at the leading edge. Dynamic instability accounts for this observation if in general microtubules do not catastrophically disassemble from the plus end, but instead have a significant probability of undergoing a transition to the growing phase before they depolymerize completely. This type of instability we call tempered rather than catastrophic because, through limited disassembly followed by regrowth, it will preferentially replace polymer domains at the ends of microtubules, thus accounting for the observation that the half-time of microtubule domain replacement is shorter with proximity to the leading edge.
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40

Patel-Hett, Sunita, Jennifer L. Richardson, Harald Schulze, Ksenija Drabek, Natasha A. Isaac, Karin Hoffmeister, Ramesh A. Shivdasani, et al. "Visualization of microtubule growth in living platelets reveals a dynamic marginal band with multiple microtubules." Blood 111, no. 9 (May 1, 2008): 4605–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2007-10-118844.

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Abstract The marginal band of microtubules maintains the discoid shape of resting blood platelets. Although studies of platelet microtubule coil structure conclude that it is composed of a single microtubule, no investigations of its dynamics exist. In contrast to previous studies, permeabilized platelets incubated with GTP-rhodamine-tubulin revealed tubulin incorporation at 7.9 (± 1.9) points throughout the coil, and anti-EB1 antibodies stained 8.7 (± 2.0) sites, indicative of multiple free microtubules. To pursue this result, we expressed the microtubule plus-end marker EB3-GFP in megakaryocytes and examined its behavior in living platelets released from these cells. Time-lapse microscopy of EB3-GFP in resting platelets revealed multiple assembly sites within the coil and a bidirectional pattern of assembly. Consistent with these findings, tyrosinated tubulin, a marker of newly assembled microtubules, localized to resting platelet microtubule coils. These results suggest that the resting platelet marginal band contains multiple highly dynamic microtubules of mixed polarity. Analysis of microtubule coil diameters in newly formed resting platelets indicates that microtubule coil shrinkage occurs with aging. In addition, activated EB3-GFP–expressing platelets exhibited a dramatic increase in polymerizing microtubules, which travel outward and into filopodia. Thus, the dynamic microtubules associated with the marginal band likely function during both resting and activated platelet states.
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41

Burakov, Anton, Ivan Vorobjev, Irina Semenova, Ann Cowan, John Carson, Yi Wu, and Vladimir Rodionov. "Persistent growth of microtubules at low density." Molecular Biology of the Cell 32, no. 5 (March 1, 2021): 435–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e20-08-0546.

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We describe a novel mechanism for regulation of microtubule dynamics that relates the behavior of microtubules to their local density. In densely populated areas of cytoplasm, microtubules display dynamic instability, whereas in sparsely populated areas they persistently grow. This behavior allows them to rapidly fill nascent areas of cytoplasm.
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42

Barr, Alexis R., and Fanni Gergely. "MCAK-Independent Functions of ch-Tog/XMAP215 in Microtubule Plus-End Dynamics." Molecular and Cellular Biology 28, no. 23 (September 22, 2008): 7199–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mcb.01040-08.

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ABSTRACT The formation of a functional bipolar mitotic spindle is essential for genetic integrity. In human cells, the microtubule polymerase XMAP215/ch-Tog ensures spindle bipolarity by counteracting the activity of the microtubule-depolymerizing kinesin XKCM1/MCAK. Their antagonistic effects on microtubule polymerization confer dynamic instability on microtubules assembled in cell-free systems. It is, however, unclear if a similar interplay governs microtubule behavior in mammalian cells in vivo. Using real-time analysis of spindle assembly, we found that ch-Tog is required to produce or maintain long centrosomal microtubules after nuclear-envelope breakdown. In the absence of ch-Tog, microtubule assembly at centrosomes was impaired and microtubules were nondynamic. Interkinetochore distances and the lengths of kinetochore fibers were also reduced in these cells. Codepleting MCAK with ch-Tog improved kinetochore fiber length and interkinetochore separation but, surprisingly, did not rescue centrosomal microtubule assembly and microtubule dynamics. Our data therefore suggest that ch-Tog has at least two distinct roles in spindle formation. First, it protects kinetochore microtubules from depolymerization by MCAK. Second, ch-Tog plays an essential role in centrosomal microtubule assembly, a function independent of MCAK activity. Thus, the notion that the antagonistic activities of MCAK and ch-Tog determine overall microtubule stability is too simplistic to apply to human cells.
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43

Fassett, John T., Xin Xu, Xinli Hu, Guangshuo Zhu, Joel French, Yingjie Chen, and Robert J. Bache. "Adenosine regulation of microtubule dynamics in cardiac hypertrophy." American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology 297, no. 2 (August 2009): H523—H532. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00462.2009.

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There is evidence that endogenous extracellular adenosine reduces cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure in mice subjected to chronic pressure overload, but the mechanism by which adenosine exerts these protective effects is unknown. Here, we identified a novel role for adenosine in regulation of the cardiac microtubule cytoskeleton that may contribute to its beneficial effects in the overloaded heart. In neonatal cardiomyocytes, phenylephrine promoted hypertrophy and reorganization of the cytoskeleton, which included accumulation of sarcomeric proteins, microtubules, and desmin. Treatment with adenosine or the stable adenosine analog 2-chloroadenosine, which decreased hypertrophy, specifically reduced accumulation of microtubules. In hypertrophied cardiomyocytes, 2-chloroadenosine or adenosine treatment preferentially targeted stabilized microtubules (containing detyrosinated α-tubulin). Consistent with a role for endogenous adenosine in reducing microtubule stability, levels of detyrosinated microtubules were elevated in hearts of CD73 knockout mice (deficient in extracellular adenosine production) compared with wild-type mice (195%, P < 0.05). In response to aortic banding, microtubules increased in hearts of wild-type mice; this increase was exaggerated in CD73 knockout mice, with significantly greater amounts of tubulin partitioning into the cold-stable Triton-insoluble fractions. The levels of this stable cytoskeletal fraction of tubulin correlated strongly with the degree of heart failure. In agreement with a role for microtubule stabilization in promoting cardiac dysfunction, colchicine treatment of aortic-banded mice reduced hypertrophy and improved cardiac function compared with saline-treated controls. These results indicate that microtubules contribute to cardiac dysfunction and identify, for the first time, a role for adenosine in regulating cardiomyocyte microtubule dynamics.
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Kristofferson, D., T. Mitchison, and M. Kirschner. "Direct observation of steady-state microtubule dynamics." Journal of Cell Biology 102, no. 3 (March 1, 1986): 1007–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.102.3.1007.

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Different types of unusual dynamic behavior have been reported for steady-state microtubules. While almost all earlier reports relied on kinetic measurements of bulk polymerization, we have directly visualized the steady-state addition of subunits to individual microtubules through the use of tubulin derivitized with biotin. Biotinylated tubulin was used both as an internal "seed" for polymerization and as a marker for assembly onto the ends of microtubules composed of purified tubulin. Biotinylated segments were distinguished from unmodified tubulin by double-label immunofluorescence. Microtubule lengths, number concentrations, and segment lengths have been monitored with time at steady state under two buffer conditions. The results indicate that the microtubule steady state under these conditions is a balance between a majority of slowly growing microtubules and a minority of rapidly depolymerizing ones as described by the "dynamic instability" model (Mitchison T., and M. Kirschner, 1984, Nature (Lond.)., 312:232-242). Microtubules show no evidence of treadmilling; instead most show progressive growth off both ends at steady state. Although solvent conditions markedly influence the growth rates, qualitatively the behavior is unchanged.
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45

Bré, M. H., R. Pepperkok, A. M. Hill, N. Levilliers, W. Ansorge, E. H. Stelzer, and E. Karsenti. "Regulation of microtubule dynamics and nucleation during polarization in MDCK II cells." Journal of Cell Biology 111, no. 6 (December 1, 1990): 3013–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.111.6.3013.

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MDCK cells form a polarized epithelium when they reach confluence in tissue culture. We have previously shown that concomitantly with the establishment of intercellular junctions, centrioles separate and microtubules lose their radial organization (Bacallao, R., C. Antony, C. Dotti, E. Karsenti, E.H.K. Stelzer, and K. Simons. 1989. J. Cell Biol. 109:2817-2832. Buendia, B., M.H. Bré, G. Griffiths, and E. Karsenti. 1990. 110:1123-1136). In this work, we have examined the pattern of microtubule nucleation before and after the establishment of intercellular contacts. We analyzed the elongation rate and stability of microtubules in single and confluent cells. This was achieved by microinjection of Paramecium axonemal tubulin and detection of the newly incorporated subunits by an antibody directed specifically against the Paramecium axonemal tubulin. The determination of newly nucleated microtubule localization has been made possible by the use of advanced double-immunofluorescence confocal microscopy. We have shown that in single cells, newly nucleated microtubules originate from several sites concentrated in a region localized close to the nucleus and not from a single spot that could correspond to a pair of centrioles. In confluent cells, newly nucleated microtubules were still more dispersed. The microtubule elongation rate of individual microtubules was not different in single and confluent cells (4 microns/min). However, in confluent cells, the population of long lived microtubules was strongly increased. In single or subconfluent cells most microtubules showed a t1/2 of less than 30 min, whereas in confluent monolayers, a large population of microtubules had a t1/2 of greater than 2 h. These results, together with previous observations cited above, indicate that during the establishment of polarity in MDCK cells, microtubule reorganization involves both a relocalization of microtubule-nucleating activity and increased microtubule stabilization.
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46

Dave, Sandeep, Samuel J. Anderson, Pallavi Sinha Roy, Emmanuel T. Nsamba, Angela R. Bunning, Yusuke Fukuda, and Mohan L. Gupta. "Discrete regions of the kinesin-8 Kip3 tail differentially mediate astral microtubule stability and spindle disassembly." Molecular Biology of the Cell 29, no. 15 (August 2018): 1866–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e18-03-0199.

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To function in diverse cellular processes, the dynamic properties of microtubules must be tightly regulated. Cellular microtubules are influenced by a multitude of regulatory proteins, but how their activities are spatiotemporally coordinated within the cell, or on specific microtubules, remains mostly obscure. The conserved kinesin-8 motor proteins are important microtubule regulators, and family members from diverse species combine directed motility with the ability to modify microtubule dynamics. Yet how kinesin-8 activities are appropriately deployed in the cellular context is largely unknown. Here we reveal the importance of the nonmotor tail in differentially controlling the physiological functions of the budding yeast kinesin-8, Kip3. We demonstrate that the tailless Kip3 motor domain adequately governs microtubule dynamics at the bud tip to allow spindle positioning in early mitosis. Notably, discrete regions of the tail mediate specific functions of Kip3 on astral and spindle microtubules. The region proximal to the motor domain operates to spatially regulate astral microtubule stability, while the distal tail serves a previously unrecognized role to control the timing of mitotic spindle disassembly. These findings provide insights into how nonmotor tail domains differentially control kinesin functions in cells and the mechanisms that spatiotemporally control the stability of cellular microtubules.
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47

Zou, Jianwei, Mark A. Hallen, Christine D. Yankel, and Sharyn A. Endow. "A microtubule-destabilizing kinesin motor regulates spindle length and anchoring in oocytes." Journal of Cell Biology 180, no. 3 (February 4, 2008): 459–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200711031.

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The kinesin-13 motor, KLP10A, destabilizes microtubules at their minus ends in mitosis and binds to polymerizing plus ends in interphase, regulating spindle and microtubule dynamics. Little is known about kinesin-13 motors in meiosis. In this study, we report that KLP10A localizes to the unusual pole bodies of anastral Drosophila melanogaster oocyte meiosis I spindles as well as spindle fibers, centromeres, and cortical microtubules. We frequently observe the pole bodies attached to cortical microtubules, indicating that KLP10A could mediate spindle anchoring to the cortex via cortical microtubules. Oocytes treated with drugs that suppress microtubule dynamics exhibit spindles that are reoriented more vertically to the cortex than untreated controls. A dominant-negative klp10A mutant shows both reoriented and shorter oocyte spindles, implying that, unexpectedly, KLP10A may stabilize rather than destabilize microtubules, regulating spindle length and positioning the oocyte spindle. By altering microtubule dynamics, KLP10A could promote spindle reorientation upon oocyte activation.
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48

Bulinski, J. Chloë, David J. Odde, Bonnie J. Howell, Ted D. Salmon, and Clare M. Waterman-Storer. "Rapid dynamics of the microtubule binding of ensconsin in vivo." Journal of Cell Science 114, no. 21 (November 1, 2001): 3885–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.114.21.3885.

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Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) are proteins that reversibly bind to and regulate microtubule dynamics and functions in vivo. We examined the dynamics of binding of a MAP called ensconsin (E-MAP-115) to microtubules in vivo. We used 5×GFP-EMTB, a construct in which the microtubule-binding domain of ensconsin (EMTB) is fused to five copies of green fluorescent protein (GFP), as a reporter molecule amenable to the use of fluorescent speckle microscopy. Fluorescent speckle microscopy (FSM) sequences and kymograph analyses showed rapid dynamics of speckles comprised of 5×GFP-EMTB in untreated cells. By contrast, in detergent-lysed cytoskeletons, speckles were not dynamic. Since detergent-lysed cytoskeletons differ from living cells in that they lack both ATP and dynamic microtubules, we used azide treatment to substantially reduce the level of ATP in living cells and we used Taxol to halt microtubule dynamics. Both treatments slowed the dynamics of 5×GFP-EMTB speckles observed by FSM. We also used fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) to quantify the half-time of binding and dissociation of the 5×GFP-EMTB chimera and to compare this half-time to that of the full-length MAP molecule. In untreated cells, the tg of either 5×GFP-EMTB or full-length GFP-ensconsin was similarly rapid (∼4 seconds), while in ATP-reduced and Taxol-treated cells, tg was increased to 210 seconds and 40 seconds, respectively. In detergent-extracted cells no recovery was seen. Consistent with the rapid dynamics of 5×GFP-EMTB measured with fluorescent speckle microscopy and FRAP, we estimated that the affinity of the MAP for microtubules is ∼40 μM in untreated living cells, compared with ∼1 μM in vitro. However, KD,app was not significantly changed in the presence of azide and was increased to 110 μM in the presence of Taxol. To test whether changes in the phosphorylation state of cellular proteins might be responsible for altering the dynamics of ensconsin binding, we used FSM to monitor staurosporine-treated cells. Staurosporine treatment substantially halted dynamics of 5×GFP-EMTB speckles along MTs. Our results show that ensconsin is highly dynamic in its association with microtubules, and its microtubule association can be altered by in vivo phosphorylation events.
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49

Nejedla, Michaela, Sara Sadi, Vadym Sulimenko, Francisca Nunes de Almeida, Hans Blom, Pavel Draber, Pontus Aspenström, and Roger Karlsson. "Profilin connects actin assembly with microtubule dynamics." Molecular Biology of the Cell 27, no. 15 (August 2016): 2381–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.e15-11-0799.

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Profilin controls actin nucleation and assembly processes in eukaryotic cells. Actin nucleation and elongation promoting factors (NEPFs) such as Ena/VASP, formins, and WASP-family proteins recruit profilin:actin for filament formation. Some of these are found to be microtubule associated, making actin polymerization from microtubule-associated platforms possible. Microtubules are implicated in focal adhesion turnover, cell polarity establishment, and migration, illustrating the coupling between actin and microtubule systems. Here we demonstrate that profilin is functionally linked to microtubules with formins and point to formins as major mediators of this association. To reach this conclusion, we combined different fluorescence microscopy techniques, including superresolution microscopy, with siRNA modulation of profilin expression and drug treatments to interfere with actin dynamics. Our studies show that profilin dynamically associates with microtubules and this fraction of profilin contributes to balance actin assembly during homeostatic cell growth and affects micro­tubule dynamics. Hence profilin functions as a regulator of microtubule (+)-end turnover in addition to being an actin control element.
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50

Bayley, P. M., M. J. Schilstra, and S. R. Martin. "A simple formulation of microtubule dynamics: quantitative implications of the dynamic instability of microtubule populations in vivo and in vitro." Journal of Cell Science 93, no. 2 (June 1, 1989): 241–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jcs.93.2.241.

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A simple formulation of microtubule dynamic instability is presented, which is based on the experimental observations by T. Horio and H. Hotani of coexisting, interconverting growing and shrinking microtubules. Employing only three independent, experimentally determined parameters for a given microtubule end, this treatment accounts quantitatively for the principal features of the observed dynamic behaviour of steady-state tubulin microtubules in vitro. Experimental data are readily reproduced for microtubule length redistribution, and for the kinetics of tubulin exchange processes, including pulse-chase properties. The relative importance of dynamic incorporation and that due to treadmilling are assessed. Dynamic incorporation is found to dominate the overall exchange properties; polarized incorporation due to treadmilling generally becomes significant only when the dynamics are largely suppressed. This treatment also permits simulation of certain cellular phenomena, showing how microtubule renucleation can control microtubule growth, by means of changes in microtubule number concentration in a system at constant microtubule mass. A relatively simple extension of the formulation accounts quantitatively for non-steady-state microtubule properties, e.g. dilution-induced rapid disassembly and the oscillatory mode of microtubule assembly. The principles relating dynamic instability and oscillatory behaviour are clearly indicated. Possible mechanisms of the switching of microtubules are briefly discussed.
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