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Characterizing the Inhibition of Katanin Using Tubulin Carboxy-Terminal Tail Constructs

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Abstract
Understanding how the cellular cytoskeleton is maintained and regulated is important to elucidate the functions of many structures such as the mitotic spindle, cilia and flagella. Katanin p60, microtubule-severing enzymes from the ATPase associated with cellular activities (AAA+) family, has previously been shown in our lab to be inhibited by free tubulin as well as α- and β-tubulin carboxy-terminal tail (CTT) constructs. Here we investigate the inhibition ability of several different tubulin CTT sequences. We quantify the effect of the addition of these constructs on the severing and binding activity of katanin. We find that some constructs inhibit katanin better than others and two constructs that appear to enhance katanin activity. Our findings add nuance to our previous findings that consensus α-tubulin tails are less inhibitory of katanin than consensus β-tubulin [3]. Surprisingly, we find that a polyglutamate sequence activates katanin while it has previously been shown to inhibit spastin, a different microtubule-severing enzyme associated with the neuromuscular disease Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia [23]. These results highlight that different CTT sequences can control the activity of severing enzymes and ultimately affect the cytoskeletal network organization in a cell type and location-dependent manner.
Type
thesis
Date
2016-09
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