Structural basis for the interaction of tubulin with proteins and drugs that affect microtubule dynamics

KH Downing - Annual review of cell and developmental biology, 2000 - annualreviews.org
KH Downing
Annual review of cell and developmental biology, 2000annualreviews.org
▪ Abstract The microtubule cytoskeleton is a highly regulated system. At different times in the
cell cycle and positions within the organism, microtubules can be very stable or highly
dynamic. Stability and dynamics are regulated by interaction with a large number of proteins
that themselves may change at specific points in the cell cycle. Exogenous ligands can
disrupt the normal processes by either increasing or decreasing microtubule stability and
inhibiting their dynamic behavior. The recent determination of the structure of tubulin, the …
Abstract
The microtubule cytoskeleton is a highly regulated system. At different times in the cell cycle and positions within the organism, microtubules can be very stable or highly dynamic. Stability and dynamics are regulated by interaction with a large number of proteins that themselves may change at specific points in the cell cycle. Exogenous ligands can disrupt the normal processes by either increasing or decreasing microtubule stability and inhibiting their dynamic behavior. The recent determination of the structure of tubulin, the main component of microtubules, makes it possible now to begin to understand the details of these interactions. We review here the structure of the tubulin dimer, with particular regard to how proteins and drugs may bind and modulate microtubule dynamics.
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