4.8 Article

Microtubule-Driven Multimerization Recruits ase1p onto Overlapping Microtubules

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 21, Pages 1713-1717

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2008.09.046

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dutch Research Council
  2. Erasmus MC
  3. ALW
  4. European Science Foundation (European Young Investigators [EURYI] Award)
  5. Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP-CDA)
  6. Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM)
  7. Human Frontier Science Program
  8. DFG Center

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Microtubule (MT) crosslinking proteins of the ase1p/PRC1/Map65 family play a major role in the construction of MT networks such as the mitotic spindle. Most homologs in this family have been shown to localize with a remarkable specificity to sets of MTs that overlap with an antiparallel relative orientation [1-4]. Regulatory proteins bind to ase1p/PRC1/Map65 and appear to use the localization to set up precise spatial signals [5-10]. Here, we present evidence for a mechanism of localized protein multimerization underlying the specific targeting of ase1p, the fision yeast homolog. In controlled in vitro experiments, dimers of ase1-GFP diffused along the surface of single MTs and, at concentrations above a certain threshold, assembled into static multimeric structures. We observed that this threshold was significantly lower on overlapping MTs. We also observed diffusion and multimerization of ase1-GFP on MTs inside living cells, suggesting that a multimerization-driven localization mechanism is relevant in vivo. The domains responsible for MT binding and multimerization were identified via a series of ase1p truncations. Our findings show that cells use a finely tuned cooperative localization mechanism that exploits differences in the geometry and concentration of ase1p binding sites along single and overlapping MTs.

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