ISSN:
1573-4919
Keywords:
MAPs
;
205 kDa protein
;
Vero cells
;
immunofluorescence
;
cell microinjection analysis
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
,
Chemistry and Pharmacology
,
Medicine
Notes:
Abstract Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) interact with tubulinin vitro andin vivo. Despite that there is a large amount of information on the roles of these proteins in neurons, the data on non-neuronal MAPs or MAPs-related proteins is scarce. There is an increasing number of microtubule-interacting proteins that have been identified in different cultured cell lines, and some of them share common functional epitopes with the most well-known MAPs, MAP-2 and tau. In a search for tubulin-interacting proteins in non-neuronal cells we identified a 205 kDa protein in the monkey kidney Vero cells in culture, on the basis of immunological studies and affinity chromatography. This protein interacts with the C-terminal moiety of β-tubulin and cosediments with taxol assembled microtubules, but it was not recovered after successive cycles of assembly and disassembly. The presence of neuronal MAPs such as MAP-1, MAP-2 and tau was not detected in these cells. Interestingly, the studies showed that the 205 kDa protein contained a tubulin binding motif which was recognized by site-directed antibodies that also tag tubulin binding epitopes on MAP-2 and tau. This characteristic led us to designate this protein as MBD-205, a component that shares binding domains with these MAPs, rather than as a marker of the MAPs family. On the other hand, immunofluorescence experiments using site-specific antibodies, i.e. MAP-reacting monoclonal anti-idiotypic reagent MTB6.22 and a polyclonal antibody to the second tau repeat, revealed a MBD-205 co-localization with membrane structures and microtubule-organizing centers in Vero cells. Microinjection studies along with studies on the cell distribution suggest that MBD-205 appears to play a structural role at the level of the microtubule interactions in these cells.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00944389
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