4.7 Article

Microtubule-associated protein 1A (MAP1A) and MAP1B:: Light chains determine distinct functional properties

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 22, Issue 6, Pages 2106-2114

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.22-06-02106.2002

Keywords

actin; brain development; microtubule-associated proteins; microtubule stability; neuronal cytoskeleton; tubulin polymerization

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The microtubule-associated proteins 1A (MAP1A) and 1B (MAP1B) are distantly related protein complexes consisting of heavy and light chains and are thought to play a role in regulating the neuronal cytoskeleton, MAP1B during neuritogenesis and MAP1A in mature neurons. To elucidate functional differences between MAP1B and MAP1A and to determine the role of the light chain in the MAP1A protein complex, we chose to investigate the functional properties of the light chain of MAP1A (LC2) and compare them with the light chain of MAP1B (LC1). We found that LC2 binds to microtubules in vivo and in vitro and induces rapid polymerization of tubulin. A microtubule-binding domain in its NH2 terminus was found to be necessary and sufficient for these activities. The analysis of LC1 revealed that it too bound to microtubules and induced tubulin polymerization via a crucial but structurally unrelated NH2-terminal domain. The two light chains differed, however, in their effects on microtubule bundling and stability in vivo. Furthermore, we identified actin filament binding domains located at the COOH terminus of LC2 and LC1 and obtained evidence that binding to actin filaments is attributable to direct interaction with actin. Our findings establish LC2 as a crucial determinant of MAP1A function, reveal LC2 as a potential linker of neuronal microtubules and microfilaments, and suggest that the postnatal substitution of MAP1B by MAP1A leads to expression of a protein with an overlapping but distinct set of functions.

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