4.5 Article

The glycolytic enzyme enolase is present in sperm tail and displays nucleotide-dependent association with microtubules

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 79, Issue 2, Pages 104-111

Publisher

URBAN & FISCHER VERLAG
DOI: 10.1078/S0171-9335(04)70012-6

Keywords

enolase; glycolytic enzyme; microtubules; nucleotides; taxol; spermatogenesis

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We examined the expression and localisation of enolase (2-phospho-D-glycerate hydrolase) in differentiating rat spermatogenic cells. We found that enolase is most abundant in mature spermatozoa and in residual cytoplasmic bodies detached from elongating spermatids with little to no enolase detected in meiotic primary spermatocytes and round spermatids. We localised enolase mostly to the tail of mature spermatozoa by immunoblotting and by immunofluorescence, RT-PCR analysis of differentiating spermatogenic cells detected only the alpha isoform of enolase. As several glycolytic enzymes are known to associate with microtubules prepared from brain, we investigated the association of enolase with brain and testis microtubules. We found that only a small fraction of testis and brain-derived cytosolic enolase (4.9% and 11.2%, respectively) co-sediments with microtubules stabilised in the presence of taxol. In the presence of certain nucleotides in excess (3 mM ATP, CTP, GTP and ITP) the association of enolase with microtubules was disrupted, however, this was not the case for UTP. This observation is consistent with the finding that in the presence of 0.5 mM AMP-PNP, a nonhydrolysable analogue of ATP, there is an increased association of enolase with microtubules. We propose that the nucleotide-dependent association of enolase with microtubules regulates enzyme activity by linking energy production to utilisation.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available