4.8 Article

Isolation of Functional Tubulin Dimers and of Tubulin- Associated Proteins from Mammalian Cells

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 13, Pages 1728-1736

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.04.069

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) Chemical Sciences grant [700.59.011]
  2. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) Graduate Program grant [022.004.002]
  3. NWO part of the National Roadmap Large-Scale Research Facilities of the Netherlands [184.032.201]

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The microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton forms a dynamic filamentous network that is essential for many processes, including mitosis, cell polarity and shape, neurite outgrowth and migration, and ciliogenesis [1, 2]. MTs are built up of a/beta-tubulin heterodimers, and their dynamic behavior is in part regulated by tubulin-associated proteins (TAPs). Here we describe a novel system to study mammalian tubulins and TAPs. We co-expressed equimolar amounts of triple-tagged a-tubulin and beta-tubulin using a 2A ``self-cleaving'' peptide and isolated functional fluorescent tubulin dimers from transfected HEK293T cells with a rapid two-step approach. We also produced two mutant tubulins that cause brain malformations in tubulinopathy patients [3]. We then applied a paired mass-spectrometry-based method to identify tubulin-binding proteins in HEK293T cells and describe both novel and known TAPs. We find that CKAP5 and the CLASPs, which are MT plus-end-tracking proteins with TOG(L)-domains [4], bind tubulin efficiently, as does the Golgi-associated protein GCC185, which interacts with the CLASPs [5]. The N-terminal TOGL domain of CLASP1 contributes to tubulin binding and allows CLASP1 to function as an autonomous MT-growthpromoting factor. Interestingly, mutant tubulins bind less well to a number of TAPs, including CLASPs and GCC185, and incorporate less efficiently into cellular MTs. Moreover, expression of these mutants in cells impairs several MT-growth-related processes involving TAPs. Thus, stable tubulin-TAP interactions regulate MT nucleation and growth in cells. Combined, our results provide a resource for investigating tubulin interactions and functions and widen the spectrum of tubulin-related disease mechanisms.

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