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Autopalmitoylation of tubulin
Author(s) -
Wolff J.,
Zambito Anna Maria,
Britto P. Jeram,
Knipling Leslie
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1110/ps.9.7.1357
Subject(s) - tubulin , guanidine , dimer , chemistry , cysteine , iodoacetamide , palmitoylation , depolymerization , microtubule , stereochemistry , biochemistry , biophysics , polymerization , enzyme , biology , organic chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , polymer
Pure rat brain tubulin is readily palmitoylated in vitro using [ 3 H]palmitoyl CoA but no added enzymes. A maximum of approximately six palmitic acids are added per dimer in 2–3 h at 36–37 °C under native conditions. Both α and β tubulin are labeled, and 63–73% of the label was hydroxylamine‐labile, presumed thioesters. Labeling increases with increasing pH and temperature, and with low concentrations of guanidine HCl or KCl (but not with urea) to a maximum of ∼13 palmitates/dimer. High SDS and guanidine HCl concentrations are inhibitory. At no time could all 20 cysteine residues of the dimer be palmitoylated. Polymerization to microtubules, or use of tubulin S, markedly decreases the accessibility of the palmitoylation sites. Palmitoylation increases the electrophoretic mobility of a portion of α tubulin toward the β band. Palmitoylated tubulin binds a colchicine analogue normally, but during three warm/cold polymerization/ depolymerization cycles there is a progressive loss of palmitoylated tubulin, indicating decreased polymerization competence. We postulate that local electrostatic factors are major regulators of reactivity of tubulin cysteine residues toward palmitoyl CoA, and that the negative charges surrounding a number of the cysteines are sensitive to negative charges on palmitoyl CoA.