Drosophila Stathmins Bind Tubulin Heterodimers with High and Variable Stoichiometries (original) (raw)

2010, Journal of Biological Chemistry

A synergistic relationship between three regions of stathmin family proteins is required for the formation of a stable complex with tubulin

Biochemical Journal, 2004

Stathmin is a ubiquitous 17 kDa cytosolic phosphoprotein proposed to play a general role in the integration and relay of intracellular signalling pathways. It is believed to regulate microtubule dynamics by sequestering tubulin in a complex made of two tubulin heterodimers per stathmin molecule (T 2 S complex). The other proteins of the stathmin family can also bind two tubulin heterodimers through their SLD (stathmin-like domain), but the different tubulin:SLD complexes display varying stabilities. In this study, we analysed the relative influence of three regions of SLDs on the interaction with tubulin and the mechanistic processes that lead to its sequestration. Tubulin-binding properties of fragments and chimaeras of stathmin and RB3 SLD were studied in vitro by tubulin polymerization, size-exclusion chromatography and surface plasmon resonance assays. Our results show that the N-terminal region of SLDs favours the binding of the first tubulin heterodimer and that the second C-terminal tubulinbinding site confers the specific stability of a given tubulin:SLD complex. Our results highlight the molecular processes by which tubulin co-operatively interacts with the SLDs. This knowledge may contribute to drug development aimed at disturbing microtubules that could be used for the treatment of cancer.

Model for stathmin/OP18 binding to tubulin

Embo Journal, 2000

Stathmin/OP18 is a regulatory phosphoprotein that controls microtubule (MT) dynamics. The protein does not have a defined three-dimensional structure, although it contains three distinct regions (an unstructured N-terminus, N: 1-44; a region with high helix propensity, H 1: 44-89; and a region with low helix propensity, H 2: 90-142). The full protein and a combination of H 1 and H 2 inhibits tubulin polymerization, while the combination of H 1 and the N-terminus is less efficient. None of the individual three regions alone are functional in this respect. However, all of them cross-link to α-tubulin, but only full-length stathmin produces high-molecular-weight products. Mass spectrometry analysis of α-tubulin-stathmin/OP18 and its truncation products shows that full-length stathmin/ OP18 binds to the region around helix 10 of α-tubulin, a region that is involved in longitudinal interactions in the MT, sequestering the dimer and possibly linking two tubulin heterodimers. In the absence of the N-terminus, stathmin/OP18 binds to only one molecule of α-tubulin, at the top of the free tubulin heterodimer, preventing polymerization.

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