14 research outputs found
Dynamics of Active and Passive Microtubule-Crosslinking Proteins
Schmidt, C.F. [Promotor]Peterman, E.J.G. [Copromotor
Taxanes convert regions of perturbed microtubule growth into rescue sites
Microtubules are polymers of tubulin dimers, and conformational transitions in the microtubule
lattice drive microtubule dynamic instability and affect various aspects of microtubule function.
The exact nature of these transitions and their modulation by anti -cancer drugs such as Taxol and
epothilone, which can stabilize microtubules but also perturb their growth, are poorly understood.
Here, we directly visualize the action of fluorescent Taxol and epothilone derivatives and show
that microtubules can transition to a state that triggers cooperative drug binding to form regions
with altered lattice conformation. Such regions emerge at growing microtubule ends that are in a
pre-catastrophe state and inhibit microtubule growth and shortening. Electron microscopy and in
vitro dynamics data indicate that taxane accumulation zones represent incomplete tubes that can
persist, incorporate tubulin dimers and repeatedly induce microtubule rescues. Thus, taxanes
modulate the material properties of microtubules by converting destabilized growing microtubule
ends into regions resistant to depolymerization
Shape-induced asymmetric diffusion in dendritic spines allows efficient synaptic AMPA receptor trapping
Dendritic spines are the primary postsynaptic sites of excitatory neurotransmission in the brain. They exhibit a remarkable morphological variety, ranging from thin protrusions, to stubby shapes, to bulbous mushroom shapes. The remodeling of spines is thought to regulate the strength of the synaptic connection, which depends vitally on the number and the spatial distribution of AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs). We present numerical and analytical analyses demonstrating that this shape strongly affects AMPAR diffusion. We report a pronounced suppression of the receptor exit rate out of spines with decreasing neck radius. Thus, mushroomlike spines become highly effective at retaining receptors in the spine head. Moreover, we show that the postsynaptic density further enhances receptor trapping, particularly in mushroomlike spines local exocytosis in the spine head, in contrast to release at the base, provides rapid and specific regulatory control of AMPAR concentration at synapses
Microtubule-Driven Multimerization Recruits ase1p onto Overlapping Microtubules
Microtubule (MT) crosslinking proteins of the ase1p/PRC1/Map65 family play a major role in the construction of MT networks such as the mitotic spindle. Most homologs in this family have been shown to localize with a remarkable specificity to sets of MTs that overlap with an antiparallel relative orientation []. Regulatory proteins bind to ase1p/PRC1/Map65 and appear to use the localization to set up precise spatial signals []. Here, we present evidence for a mechanism of localized protein multimerization underlying the specific targeting of ase1p, the fision yeast homolog. In controlled in vitro experiments, dimers of ase1-GFP diffused along the surface of single MTs and, at concentrations above a certain threshold, assembled into static multimeric structures. We observed that this threshold was significantly lower on overlapping MTs. We also observed diffusion and multimerization of ase1-GFP on MTs inside living cells, suggesting that a multimerization-driven localization mechanism is relevant in vivo. The domains responsible for MT binding and multimerization were identified via a series of ase1p truncations. Our findings show that cells use a finely tuned cooperative localization mechanism that exploits differences in the geometry and concentration of ase1p binding sites along single and overlapping MT