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Article
Arrangement of Subunits in Microtubules with 14 Profilaments
Biology - All Scholarship
  • George M Langford, Syracuse University
Document Type
Article
Date
11-1-1980
Keywords
  • Animals,
  • Brain,
  • ultrastructure,
  • Dogfish,
  • Microscopy,
  • Electron,
  • Microtubules,
  • Protein Binding,
  • Tubulin,
  • metabolism
Language
English
Disciplines
Description/Abstract

The structure of 14-protofilament microtubules reassembled from dogfish shark brain tubulin was analyzed by high resolution electron microscopy and optical diffraction. The simultaneous imaging of the protofilaments from near and far sides of these tubules produces a moiré pattern with a period of approximately 96 nm. Optical diffraction patterns show that the 5-nm spots that arise from the protofilaments for the two sides of the tubule are not coincident but lie off the equator by a distance of 1/192 nm-1. These data provide evidence that in reassembled microtubules containing 14 protofilaments, the protofilaments are tilted 1.5 degrees with respect to the long axis of the tubule, giving a left-handed superhelix with a pitch of 2.7 micron. The hypothesis is that the tilt of the protofilaments occurs to accommodate the 14th protofilament. It is determined that when the 14th protofilament is incorporated, the 3-start helix is maintained, but the pitch angle changes from 10.5 degrees to 11.2 degrees, the angle between protofilaments measured from the center of the microtubule changes by 2 degrees, and the dimer lattice is discontinuous. These observations show that the tubulin molecule is sufficiently flexible to accomodate slight distortions at the lateral bonding sites and that the lateral bonding regions of the alpha and beta monomers are sufficiently similar to allow either alpha-alpha and beta-beta subunit pairing or alpha-beta subunit pairing.

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Citation Information
Langford, G. M. 1980. “Arrangement of Subunits in Microtubules with 14 Profilaments.” The Journal of Cell Biology 87 (2 Pt 1): 521–26.