4.8 Article

Estimating the Microtubule GTP Cap Size In Vivo

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 18, Pages 1681-1687

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2012.06.068

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM-071522, GM-076177]
  2. National Science Foundation [MCB-0615568]

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Microtubules (MTs) polymerize via net addition of GTP-tubulin subunits to the MT plus end, which subsequently hydrolyze to GDP-tubulin in the MT lattice. Relatively stable GTP-tubulin subunits create a GTP cap at the growing MT plus end that suppresses catastrophe. To understand MT assembly regulation, we need to understand GTP hydrolysis reaction kinetics and the GTP cap size. In vitro, the GTP cap has been estimated to be as small as one layer [1-3] (13 subunits) or as large as 100-200 subunits [4]. GTP cap size estimates in vivo have not yet been reported. Using EB1-EGFP as a marker for GTP-tubulin in epithelial cells, we find on average (1) 270 EB1 dimers bound to growing MT plus ends, and (2) a GTP cap size of similar to 750 tubulin subunits. Thus, in vivo, the GTP cap is far larger than previous estimates in vitro, and similar to 60-fold larger than a single layer cap. We also find that the tail of a large GTP cap promotes MT rescue and suppresses shortening. We speculate that a large GTP cap provides a locally concentrated scaffold for tip-tracking proteins and confers persistence to assembly in the face of physical barriers such as the cell cortex.

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