Mechanism for the catastrophe-promoting activity of the microtubule destabilizer Op18/stathmin.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Department of Applied and Computational Mathematics and Statistics, Interdisciplinary Center for the Study of Biocomplexity, and Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556.

Published: December 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Regulation of microtubule dynamic instability, essential for processes like cell division and transport, is influenced by stathmin, a microtubule destabilizer associated with cancer.
  • Two main models for stathmin's action exist: one suggests it sequesters tubulin to indirectly promote microtubule catastrophe, while the other proposes a direct destabilization of microtubules.
  • Recent research indicates that stathmin binds strongly to specific tubulin structures, leading to depolymerization, which supports the idea that it destabilizes growing microtubules by interacting with their exposed ends, implicating both direct and indirect actions in cellular environments.

Article Abstract

Regulation of microtubule dynamic instability is crucial for cellular processes, ranging from mitosis to membrane transport. Stathmin (also known as oncoprotein 18/Op18) is a prominent microtubule destabilizer that acts preferentially on microtubule minus ends. Stathmin has been studied intensively because of its association with multiple types of cancer, but its mechanism of action remains controversial. Two models have been proposed. One model is that stathmin promotes microtubule catastrophe indirectly, and does so by sequestering tubulin; the other holds that stathmin alters microtubule dynamics by directly destabilizing growing microtubules. Stathmin's sequestration activity is well established, but the mechanism of any direct action is mysterious because stathmin binds to microtubules very weakly. To address these issues, we have studied interactions between stathmin and varied tubulin polymers. We show that stathmin binds tightly to Dolastatin-10 tubulin rings, which mimic curved tubulin protofilaments, and that stathmin depolymerizes stabilized protofilament-rich polymers. These observations lead us to propose that stathmin promotes catastrophe by binding to and acting upon protofilaments exposed at the tips of growing microtubules. Moreover, we suggest that stathmin's minus-end preference results from interactions between stathmin's N terminus and the surface of α-tubulin that is exposed only at the minus end. Using computational modeling of microtubule dynamics, we show that these mechanisms could account for stathmin's observed activities in vitro, but that both the direct and sequestering activities are likely to be relevant in a cellular context. Taken together, our results suggest that stathmin can promote catastrophe by direct action on protofilament structure and interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3870735PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1309958110DOI Listing

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