iScience (Sep 2020)

The Mechanism of Tubulin Assembly into Microtubules: Insights from Structural Studies

  • Marcel Knossow,
  • Valérie Campanacci,
  • Liza Ammar Khodja,
  • Benoît Gigant

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 9
p. 101511

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Microtubules are cytoskeletal components involved in pivotal eukaryotic functions such as cell division, ciliogenesis, and intracellular trafficking. They assemble from αβ-tubulin heterodimers and disassemble in a process called dynamic instability, which is driven by GTP hydrolysis. Structures of the microtubule and of soluble tubulin have been determined by cryo-EM and by X-ray crystallography, respectively. Altogether, these data define the mechanism of tubulin assembly-disassembly at atomic or near-atomic level. We review here the structural changes that occur during assembly, tubulin switching from a curved conformation in solution to a straight one in the microtubule core. We also present more subtle changes associated with GTP binding, leading to tubulin activation for assembly. Finally, we show how cryo-EM and X-ray crystallography are complementary methods to characterize the interaction of tubulin with proteins involved either in intracellular transport or in microtubule dynamics regulation.

Keywords