eLife (Jun 2017)

Direct measurement of conformational strain energy in protofilaments curling outward from disassembling microtubule tips

  • Jonathan W Driver,
  • Elisabeth A Geyer,
  • Megan E Bailey,
  • Luke M Rice,
  • Charles L Asbury

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.28433
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

Read online

Disassembling microtubules can generate movement independently of motor enzymes, especially at kinetochores where they drive chromosome motility. A popular explanation is the ‘conformational wave’ model, in which protofilaments pull on the kinetochore as they curl outward from a disassembling tip. But whether protofilaments can work efficiently via this spring-like mechanism has been unclear. By modifying a previous assay to use recombinant tubulin and feedback-controlled laser trapping, we directly demonstrate the spring-like elasticity of curling protofilaments. Measuring their mechanical work output suggests they carry ~25% of the energy of GTP hydrolysis as bending strain, enabling them to drive movement with efficiency similar to conventional motors. Surprisingly, a β-tubulin mutant that dramatically slows disassembly has no effect on work output, indicating an uncoupling of disassembly speed from protofilament strain. These results show the wave mechanism can make a major contribution to kinetochore motility and establish a direct approach for measuring tubulin mechano-chemistry.

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