Working strokes produced by curling protofilaments at disassembling microtubule tips can be biochemically tuned and vary with species

Author:

Murray Lucas E1ORCID,Kim Haein1,Rice Luke M23ORCID,Asbury Charles L14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington

2. Department of Biophysics, UT Southwestern Medical Center

3. Department of Biochemistry, UT Southwestern Medical Center

4. Department of Biochemistry, University of Washington

Abstract

The disassembly of microtubules can generate force and drive intracellular motility. During mitosis, for example, chromosomes remain persistently attached via kinetochores to the tips of disassembling microtubules, which pull the sister chromatids apart. According to the conformational wave hypothesis, such force generation requires that protofilaments curl outward from the disassembling tips to exert pulling force directly on kinetochores. Rigorously testing this idea will require modifying the mechanical and energetic properties of curling protofilaments, but no way to do so has yet been described. Here, by direct measurement of working strokes generated in vitro by curling protofilaments, we show that their mechanical energy output can be increased by adding magnesium, and that yeast microtubules generate larger and more energetic working strokes than bovine microtubules. Both the magnesium and species-dependent increases in work output can be explained by lengthening the protofilament curls, without any change in their bending stiffness or intrinsic curvature. These observations demonstrate how work output from curling protofilaments can be tuned and suggest evolutionary conservation of the amount of curvature strain energy stored in the microtubule lattice.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Packard Foundation

Welch Foundation

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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