» Articles » PMID: 6633643

Elevation of Tubulin Levels by Microinjection Suppresses New Tubulin Synthesis

Overview
Journal Nature
Specialty Science
Date 1983 Oct 20
PMID 6633643
Citations 40
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Most eukaryotic cells rapidly and specifically depress synthesis of alpha- and beta-tubulin polypeptides in response to microtubule inhibitors which cause microtubule depolymerization and presumably increase the intracellular concentration of free subunits. Other drugs which interfere with microtubule function but which lead to a decrease in the subunit pool size have little effect on the rate of new tubulin synthesis. These findings have previously been interpreted to indicate that cultured cells synthesize tubulin constitutively unless the subunit pool rises above a specified level. At this point an autoregulatory control mechanism is triggered which suppresses new tubulin synthesis through specific loss of tubulin mRNAs. That tubulin RNA levels are dramatically lowered by microtubule depolymerizing drugs is unquestionably correct; that fluctuations in the depolymerized tubulin pool size are responsible for altered RNA levels rests, however, entirely on the presumptive effects of different microtubule drugs. This caveat is not trivial, as these drugs induce gross morphological alterations, and the specificities and detailed mechanisms of action of such drugs remain poorly understood. To investigate the effect of altered levels of tubulin subunits on the rate of new tubulin synthesis in mammalian cells, we have microinjected purified tubulin subunits into cells in culture and analysed the synthesized proteins. We report here that tubulin synthesis is rapidly and specifically suppressed by injection of an amount of tubulin roughly equivalent to 25-50% of the amount initially present in the cell, thus indicating the presence of an eukaryotic, autoregulatory control mechanism which specifies tubulin content in a cultured mammalian cell line.

Citing Articles

Insights on the Role of α- and β-Tubulin Isotypes in Early Brain Development.

Tantry M, Santhakumar K Mol Neurobiol. 2023; 60(7):3803-3823.

PMID: 36943622 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-023-03302-1.


An essential role for α4A-tubulin in platelet biogenesis.

Strassel C, Magiera M, Dupuis A, Batzenschlager M, Hovasse A, Pleines I Life Sci Alliance. 2019; 2(1).

PMID: 30760556 PMC: 6374996. DOI: 10.26508/lsa.201900309.


CKD-516 displays vascular disrupting properties and enhances anti-tumor activity in combination with chemotherapy in a murine tumor model.

Moon C, Lee S, Lee H, Dung L, Cho W, Cha H Invest New Drugs. 2013; 32(3):400-11.

PMID: 24202729 DOI: 10.1007/s10637-013-0043-8.


Cancer preventive isothiocyanates induce selective degradation of cellular alpha- and beta-tubulins by proteasomes.

Mi L, Gan N, Cheema A, Dakshanamurthy S, Wang X, Yang D J Biol Chem. 2009; 284(25):17039-17051.

PMID: 19339240 PMC: 2719342. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M901789200.


Missorting of tau in neurons causes degeneration of synapses that can be rescued by the kinase MARK2/Par-1.

Thies E, Mandelkow E J Neurosci. 2007; 27(11):2896-907.

PMID: 17360912 PMC: 6672561. DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4674-06.2007.