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Molecular basis for CPAP-tubulin interaction in controlling centriolar and ciliary length.

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Pozniakovsky,  Andrei I.
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Max Planck Society;

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Poser,  Ina
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Max Planck Society;

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Hyman,  Anthony
Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Max Planck Society;

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引用

Zheng, X., Ramani, A., Soni, K., Gottardo, M., Zheng, S., Gooi, L. M., Li, W., Feng, S., Mariappan, A., Wason, A., Widlund, P., Pozniakovsky, A. I., Poser, I., Deng, H., Ou, G., Riparbelli, M., Giuliano, C., Hyman, A., Sattler, M., Gopalakrishnan, J., & Li, H. (2016). Molecular basis for CPAP-tubulin interaction in controlling centriolar and ciliary length. Nature Communications, 7:.


引用: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0001-0315-4
要旨
Centrioles and cilia are microtubule-based structures, whose precise formation requires controlled cytoplasmic tubulin incorporation. How cytoplasmic tubulin is recognized for centriolar/ciliary-microtubule construction remains poorly understood. Centrosomal-P4.1-associated-protein (CPAP) binds tubulin via its PN2-3 domain. Here, we show that a C-terminal loop-helix in PN2-3 targets β-tubulin at the microtubule outer surface, while an N-terminal helical motif caps microtubule's α-β surface of β-tubulin. Through this, PN2-3 forms a high-affinity complex with GTP-tubulin, crucial for defining numbers and lengths of centriolar/ciliary-microtubules. Surprisingly, two distinct mutations in PN2-3 exhibit opposite effects on centriolar/ciliary-microtubule lengths. CPAP(F375A), with strongly reduced tubulin interaction, causes shorter centrioles and cilia exhibiting doublet- instead of triplet-microtubules. CPAP(EE343RR) that unmasks the β-tubulin polymerization surface displays slightly reduced tubulin-binding affinity inducing over-elongation of newly forming centriolar/ciliary-microtubules by enhanced dynamic release of its bound tubulin. Thus CPAP regulates delivery of its bound-tubulin to define the size of microtubule-based cellular structures using a 'clutch-like' mechanism.