1. Mechanism of Tubulin Oligomers and Single-Ring Disassembly Catastrophe
- Author
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Asaf Shemesh, Avi Ginsburg, Raviv Dharan, Yael Levi-Kalisman, Israel Ringel, and Uri Raviv
- Subjects
General Materials Science ,ddc:530 ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry - Abstract
The journal of physical chemistry letters 13, 5246 - 5252 (2022). doi:10.1021/acs.jpclett.2c00947, Cold tubulin dimers coexist with tubulin oligomers and single rings. These structures are involved in microtubule assembly; however, their dynamics are poorly understood. Using state-of-the-art solution synchrotron time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering, we discovered a disassembly catastrophe (half-life of ∼0.1 s) of tubulin rings and oligomers upon dilution or addition of guanosine triphosphate. A slower disassembly (half-life of ∼38 s) was observed following an increase in temperature. Our analysis showed that the assembly and disassembly processes were consistent with an isodesmic mechanism, involving a sequence of reversible reactions in which dimers were rapidly added or removed one at a time, terminated by a 2 order-of-magnitude slower ring-closing/opening step. We revealed how assembly conditions varied the mass fraction of tubulin in each of the coexisting structures, the rate constants, and the standard Helmholtz free energies for closing a ring and for longitudinal dimer–dimer associations., Published by ACS, Washington, DC
- Published
- 2022
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