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. 1978 Apr;83(4):1065-75.
doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a131995.

Characterization and in vitro polymerization of Tetrahymena tubulin

Free article

Characterization and in vitro polymerization of Tetrahymena tubulin

S Maekawa et al. J Biochem. 1978 Apr.
Free article

Abstract

Tetrahymena tubulin was purified from the cell extract using DEAE-Sephadex A-50 ion-exchanger and ammonium sulfate precipitation. About 2.2% of the total protein in the 20,000 X g supernatant was recovered as DEAE-Sephadex-purified tubulin fraction. Applying the temperature-dependent polymerization-depolymerization method to this fraction in the presence of Tetrahymena outer fibers as a seed, almost pure tubulin was obtained. Tetrahymena tubulin dimer showed different behavior on SDS-polyacrylamide gels from porcine brain tubulin, and showed very low affinity for colchicine, amounting to about one-twentieth of the binding to porcine brain tubulin. The tubulin fraction failed to polymerize into microtubules by itself. Addition of a small amount of the ciliary outer fiber fragment induced polymerization as demonstrated by viscometric measurements, but the reconstituted microtubules were very unstable in the absence of glycerol. Microtubule-depolymerizing agents such as Ca2+ ions, low temperature, or colchicine all inhibited in vitro polymerization. Although Tetrahymena tubulin purified by the polymerization-depolymerization method could copolymerize with porcine brain microtubules, the DEAE-Sephadex-purified tubulin fraction suppressed the initial rate of porcine brain microtubule assembly in vitro. There seemed to be no differences between cytoplasmic tubulin and outer fiber tubulin in colchicine binding activity or SDS-gel electrophoretic behavior, or between the fine structure of both reconstituted microtubules observed by electron microscopy.

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