Kinetic analysis of microtubule self-assembly in vitro.

Abstract The kinetics of microtubule assembly were investigated by monitoring changes in turbidity which result from the scattering of incident light by the polymer. These studies indicated that assembly occurred by a pathway involving a nucleation phase, followed by an elongation phase as evidenced by a lag in the polymerization kinetics, followed by a psuedo-first-order exponential increase in turbidity. Analytical ultracentrifugation of solutions polymerized to equilibrium showed that 6 S tubulin was the only species detectable in equilibrium with microtubules. Investigation of the elongation reaction in mixtures of 6 S tubulin and microtubule fragments demonstrated that: (1) the net rate of assembly was the sum of the rates of polymerization and depolymerization; (2) the rate of polymerization was proportional to the product of the microtubule number concentration and the 6 S tubulin concentration; and (3) the rate of depolymerization was proportional to the number concentration of microtubules. These results demonstrate that microtubule assembly occurs by a condensation polymerization mechanism consisting of distinct nucleation and elongation steps. Microtubules are initiated in a series of protein association reactions in a pathway that has not been fully elucidated. Elongation proceeds by the consecutive association of 6 S tubulin subunits onto the ends of existing microtubules. Similarly, depolymerization occurs by dissociation of 6 S subunits from the ends of microtubules. The rate constants measured for polymerization and depolymerization at 30 °C were 4 × 106 m −1 s−1 and 7 s−1, respectively.

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