Role of Microtubule-Associated Proteins in the Control of Microtubule
Assembly.
Maccioni, Ricardo B., and Ver[acute]onica A. Cambiazo.
Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biology, Dept. of Biology, Faculty of
Sciences, University of Chile, and International Center for Cancer and
Developmental Biology, Nunoa, Santiago, Chile.
APStracts 2:0012P, 1995.
ABSTRACT
In eukaryotic cells, microtubules, actin, and intermediate filaments interact
to form the cytoskeletal network involved in determination of cell
architecture, intracellular transport, modulation of surface receptors,
mitosis, cell motility, and differentiation. Cytoskeletal organization and
dynamics depend on protein self-associations and interactions with regulatory
elements such as microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs). The MAP family
includes large proteins like MAP-1A, MAP-1B, MAP-1C, MAP-2, and MAP-4 and
smaller components like tau and MAP-2C. This review focuses on relevant
aspects of MAP function, with emphasis on their roles in modulating
cytoskeletal interactions. In this context, MAP expression mechanisms and
posttranslational modifications are also discussed. Microtubule-associated
proteins have a rather widespread distribution among cells, but certain MAPs
have been identified in specific cell types. With single neurons, MAP-2 is
dendritic while tau is preferentially an axonal protein. Their expression is
developmentally regulated. Even though MAPs share a capacity to interact with
the COOH-terminal tubulin domain, stabilize microtubules, and link them with
other cytoskeletal polymers, they exhibit structural differences. However,
MAP-2, MAP-4, and tau have common repetitive microtubule-binding motifs.
Microtubule-associated proteins not only control cytoskeletal integrity, but
they also appear to interact with highly structural elements of cells.
Molecular biological approaches permitted localization of new MAPs in cultured
mammalian cells and invertebrate organisms and other microtubule-interacting
proteins that exhibit transient interactions with microtubules. The
structural/functional aspects of several new MAP-like proteins in centrosomes
and the mitotic spindle, functionally implicated in cell cycle events, are
also analyzed.
APS Manuscript Number P-0014-5.
Article publication scheduled October 1995 Physiological Reviews.
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1995 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 23 September 1995.