Abstract
Conditions were established for the self-assembly of milligram amounts of purified Saccharomyces cerevisiae tubulin. Microtubules assembled with pure yeast tubulin were not stabilized by taxol; hybrid microtubules containing substoichiometric amounts of bovine tubulin were stabilized. Yeast microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) were identified on affinity matrices made from hybrid and all-bovine microtubules. About 25 yeast MAPs were isolated. The amino-terminal sequences of several of these were determined: three were known metabolic enzymes, two were GTP-binding proteins (including the product of the SAR1 gene), and three were novel proteins not found in sequence databases. Affinity-purified antisera were generated against synthetic peptides corresponding to two of the apparently novel proteins (38 and 50 kDa). Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that both these proteins colocalize with intra- and extranuclear microtubules in vivo.
Dates
Type | When |
---|---|
Created | 12 years ago (Aug. 16, 2013, 6:47 p.m.) |
Deposited | 6 years, 1 month ago (July 14, 2019, 9:03 a.m.) |
Indexed | 1 year ago (Aug. 12, 2024, 7:17 a.m.) |
Issued | 33 years, 7 months ago (Jan. 1, 1992) |
Published | 33 years, 7 months ago (Jan. 1, 1992) |
Published Print | 33 years, 7 months ago (Jan. 1, 1992) |
@article{Barnes_1992, title={Yeast proteins associated with microtubules in vitro and in vivo.}, volume={3}, ISSN={1939-4586}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.3.1.29}, DOI={10.1091/mbc.3.1.29}, number={1}, journal={Molecular Biology of the Cell}, publisher={American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)}, author={Barnes, G and Louie, K A and Botstein, D}, year={1992}, month=jan, pages={29–47} }