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. 1993 Jun;4(6):615-26.
doi: 10.1091/mbc.4.6.615.

Reversible polyglutamylation of alpha- and beta-tubulin and microtubule dynamics in mouse brain neurons

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Free PMC article

Reversible polyglutamylation of alpha- and beta-tubulin and microtubule dynamics in mouse brain neurons

S Audebert et al. Mol Biol Cell. 1993 Jun.
Free PMC article

Abstract

The relationship between microtubule dynamics and polyglutamylation of tubulin was investigated in young differentiating mouse brain neurons. Selective posttranslational labeling with [3H]glutamate and immunoblotting with a specific monoclonal antibody (GT335) enabled us to analyze polyglutamylation of both alpha and beta subunits. Nocodazole markedly inhibited incorporation of [3H]glutamate into alpha- and beta-tubulin, whereas taxol had no effect for alpha-tubulin and a stimulating effect for beta-tubulin. These results strongly suggest that microtubule polymers are the preferred substrate for polyglutamylation. Chase experiments revealed the existence of a reversal reaction that, in the case of alpha-tubulin, was not affected by microtubule drugs, suggesting that deglutamylation of this subunit can occur on both polymers and soluble tubulin. Evidence was obtained that deglutamylation of alpha-tubulin operates following two distinct rates depending on the length of the polyglutamyl chain, the distal units (4th-6th) being removed rapidly whereas the proximal ones (1st-3rd) appearing much more resistant to deglutamylation. Partition of glutamylated alpha-tubulin isoforms was also correlated with the length of the polyglutamyl chain. Forms bearing four to six units were recovered specifically in the polymeric fraction, whereas those bearing one to three units were distributed evenly between polymeric and soluble fractions. It thus appears that the slow rate component of the deglutamylation reaction offers to neurons the possibility to maintain a basal level of glutamylated alpha-tubulin in the soluble pool independently of microtubule dynamics. Finally, some differences observed in the glutamylation of alpha- and beta-tubulin suggest that distinct enzymes are involved.

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