1. Dimerization and Long-Range Repulsion Established by Both Termini of the Microtubule-Associated Protein Tau.
- Author
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Donhauser ZJ, Saunders JT, D'Urso DS, and Garrett TA
- Subjects
- Humans, Microscopy, Atomic Force, Microtubule-Associated Proteins chemistry, Microtubules ultrastructure, Models, Molecular, Protein Multimerization, Static Electricity, tau Proteins chemistry
- Abstract
Tau is a microtubule-associated protein found in neuronal axons that has several well-known functions, such as promoting microtubule polymerization, stabilizing microtubules against depolymerization, and spatially organizing microtubules in axons. Two contrasting models have been previously described to explain tau's ability to organize the spacing between microtubules: complementary dimerization of the projection domains of taus on adjacent microtubules or tau's projection domain acting as a polyelectrolyte brush. In this study, atomic force microscopy was used to interrogate intermolecular interactions between layers of tau protein immobilized on mica substrates and on silicon nitride atomic force microscope tips. On these surfaces, tau adopts an orientation comparable to that when bound to microtubules, with the basic microtubule binding domain immobilized and the acidic domains extending into solution. Force-distance curves collected via atomic force microscopy reveal that full length human tau, when assembled into dense surface-bound layers, can participate in attractive electrostatic interactions consistent with the previously reported dimerization model. However, modulating the ionic strength of the surrounding solution can change the structure of these layers to produce purely repulsive interactions consistent with a polyelectrolyte brush structure, thus providing biophysical evidence to support both the zipper and brush models. In addition, a pair of projection domain deletion mutants were examined to investigate whether the projection domain of the protein is essential for the dimerization and brush models. Force-distance curves collected on layers of these proteins demonstrate that the C-terminus can play a role analogous to that of the projection domain.
- Published
- 2017
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