guanosine-diphosphate and ethylene-glycolylbis(succinimidyl-succinate)

guanosine-diphosphate has been researched along with ethylene-glycolylbis(succinimidyl-succinate)* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for guanosine-diphosphate and ethylene-glycolylbis(succinimidyl-succinate)

ArticleYear
Dynamic properties of nucleated microtubules: GTP utilisation in the subcritical concentration regime.
    Journal of cell science, 1996, Volume: 109 ( Pt 11)

    Microtubule assembly kinetics have been studied quantitatively under solution conditions supporting microtubule dynamic instability. Purified GTP-tubulin (Tu-GTP) and covalently cross-linked short microtubule seeds (EGS-seeds; Koshland et al. (1988) Nature 331, 499) were used with and without biotinylation. Under sub-critical concentration conditions ([Tu-GTP] < 5.3 microM), significant microtubule growth of limited length was observed on a proportion of the EGS-seeds by immuno-electron microscopy. A sensitive fluorescence assay for microtubule GDP production was developed for parallel assessment of GTP utilisation. This revealed a correlation between the detected microtubule growth and the production of tubulin-GDP, deriving from the shortening phase of the dynamic microtubules. This correlation was confirmed by the action of nocodazole, a specific inhibitor of microtubule assembly, that was found to abolish the GDP release. The variation of the GDP release with tubulin concentration (Jh(c) plot) was determined below the critical concentration (Cc). The GDP production observed was consistent with the elongation of the observed seeded microtubules with an apparent rate constant of 1.5 x 10(6) M-1 second-1 above a threshold of approximately 1 microM tubulin. The form of this Jh(c) plot for elongation below Cc is reproduced by the Lateral Cap model for microtubule dynamic instability adapted for seeded assembly. The behaviour of the system is contrasted with that previously studied in the absence of detectable microtubule elongation (Caplow and Shanks (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 8935-8941). The approach provides a means of monitoring microtubule dynamics at concentrations inaccessible to optical microscopy, and shows that essentially the same dynamic mechanisms apply at all concentrations. Numerical simulation of the subcritical concentration regime shows dynamic growth features applicable to the initiation of microtubule growth in vivo.

    Topics: Animals; Biotin; Computer Simulation; Cross-Linking Reagents; Fluorometry; Guanosine Diphosphate; Guanosine Triphosphate; Microtubules; Monte Carlo Method; Numerical Analysis, Computer-Assisted; Rabbits; Succinimides; Swine; Time Factors; Tubulin

1996
Mechanism of the microtubule GTPase reaction.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 1990, May-25, Volume: 265, Issue:15

    The rate of GTP hydrolysis by microtubules has been measured at tubulin subunit concentrations where microtubules undergo net disassembly. This was made possible by using microtubules stabilized against disassembly by reaction with ethylene glycol bis-(succinimidylsuccinate) (EGS) as sites for the addition of tubulin-GTP subunits. The tubulin subunit concentration was varied from 25 to 90% of the steady state concentration, and there was no net elongation of stabilized microtubule seeds. The GTPase rate with EGS microtubules was linearly proportional to the tubulin-GTP subunit concentration when this concentration was varied by dilution and by using GDP to compete with GTP for the tubulin E-site. The linear dependence of the rate is consistent with a GTP mechanism in which hydrolysis is coupled to the tubulin-GTP subunit addition to microtubule ends. It is inconsistent with reaction schemes in which: microtubules are capped by a single tubulin-GTP subunit, which hydrolyzes GTP when a tubulin-GTP subunit adds to the end; hydrolysis occurs primarily in subunits at the interface of a tubulin-GTP cap and the tubulin-GDP microtubule core; hydrolysis is not coupled to subunit addition and occurs randomly in subunits in a tubulin-GTP cap. It was also found that GDP inhibition of the microtubule GTPase rate results from GDP competition for GTP at the tubulin subunit E-site. There is no additional effect of GDP on the GTPase rate resulting from exchange into tubulin subunits at microtubule ends.

    Topics: Adenylyl Imidodiphosphate; Affinity Labels; Animals; Brain; Cattle; GTP Phosphohydrolases; Guanosine Diphosphate; Kinetics; Macromolecular Substances; Microtubules; Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases; Protein Binding; Succinimides; Tetrahymena; Tubulin

1990