| Thirteen Is the Lucky Number for Doublecortin Developmental Cell, Volume 7, Issue 1, 1 July 2004, Pages 5-6 Anna Akhmanova and Fedor Severin Summary Doublecortin is a microtubule-associated protein that is essential for normal brain development. A recent report published in shows that doublecortin associates preferentially with microtubules made of 13 protofilaments, by recognizing a novel site between the protofilaments. These findings explain how doublecortin stabilizes microtubules and provide clues about its function during neuronal migration. Summary | Full Text | PDF (40 kb) |
| At least one of the protofilaments in flagellar microtubules is not composed of tubulin Current Biology, Volume 5, Issue 2, 1 February 1995, Pages 158-167 Dana Nojima, Richard W. Linck and Edward H. Egelman Summary Contrary to what is generally assumed, at least one protofilament in the wall of the A tubule is not composed of tubulin. Our data suggest that this non-tubulin protofilament is primarily composed of tektins, proteins that show some structural similarity to intermediate filament proteins. A 480 å axial periodicity within these ribbons, revealed by scanning transmission electron microscopy, can be related to the structure of tektin, and may determine the large-scale structure of the axoneme in terms of the binding of dynein, nexin and radial spokes to the doublet microtubule. Summary | Full Text | PDF (6167 kb) |
| Surfing on microtubule ends Trends in Cell Biology, Volume 13, Issue 5, 1 May 2003, Pages 229-237 Pedro Carvalho, Jennifer S. Tirnauer and David Pellman Abstract A crowd of proteins seems to have gathered around the plus-ends of microtubules. A rapidly expanding group of proteins known as plus-end tracking proteins (+TIPs) have been identified that seem to be able to ‘surf’ the dynamic ends of microtubules. Microtubule plus-ends exist in multiple conformational and chemical states. In principle, altering this plus-end microenvironment is an appealing way for regulators such as the +TIPS to control microtubule dynamics; however, specific mechanisms are poorly defined. Here, we focus on new findings addressing the underlying mechanisms of plus-end tracking and the mechanisms by which +TIPS control microtubule dynamics. We review the evidence that plus-end-binding and the control of microtubule dynamics are mechanistically linked. We also consider the possibility that, by studying +TIPs, we might learn more about the dynamic structural changes at the microtubule ends that are at the heart of dynamic instability. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (649 kb) |
Copyright © 1995 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 69, Issue 5, 2011-2023, 1 November 1995
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(95)80071-8
Research Article
Z. Wang, S. Khan and M.P. Sheetz
Department of Cell Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.
Cytoplasmic dynein is a major microtubule motor for minus-end directed movements including retrograde axonal transport. To better understand the mechanism by which cytoplasmic dynein converts ATP energy into motility, we have analyzed the nanometer-level displacements of latex beads coated with low numbers of cytoplasmic dynein molecules. Cytoplasmic dynein-coated beads exhibited greater lateral movements among microtubule protofilaments (ave. 5.1 times/microns of displacement) compared with kinesin (ave. 0.9 times/micron). In addition, dynein moved rearward up to 100 nm over several hundred milliseconds, often in correlation with off-axis movements from one protofilament to another. We suggest that single molecules of cytoplasmic dynein move the beads because 1) there is a linear dependence of bead motility on dynein/bead ratio, 2) the binding of beads to microtubules studied by laser tweezers is best fit by a first-order Poisson, and 3) the run length histogram of dynein beads follows a first-order decay. At the cellular level, the greater disorder of cytoplasmic dynein movements may facilitate transport by decreasing the duration of collisions between kinesin and cytoplasmic dynein-powered vesicles.