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Flagellar microtubule doublet assembly in vitro reveals a regulatory role of tubulin C-terminal tails.

Marketa Schmidt CernohorskaI ZhernovEmmanuelle SteibM Le GuennecR AchekS BorgersD DemurtasLiliane MouawadZdeněk LánskýVirginie HamelPaul Guichard
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2019)
Microtubule doublets (MTDs), consisting of an incomplete B-microtubule at the surface of a complete A-microtubule, provide a structural scaffold mediating intraflagellar transport and ciliary beating. Despite the fundamental role of MTDs, the molecular mechanism governing their formation is unknown. We used a cell-free assay to demonstrate a crucial inhibitory role of the carboxyl-terminal (C-terminal) tail of tubulin in MTD assembly. Removal of the C-terminal tail of an assembled A-microtubule allowed for the nucleation of a B-microtubule on its surface. C-terminal tails of only one A-microtubule protofilament inhibited this side-to-surface tubulin interaction, which would be overcome in vivo with binding protein partners. The dynamics of B-microtubule nucleation and its distinctive isotropic elongation was elucidated by using live imaging. Thus, inherent interaction properties of tubulin provide a structural basis driving flagellar MTD assembly.
Keyphrases
  • cell free
  • binding protein
  • structural basis
  • high throughput
  • transcription factor
  • high resolution