scholarly journals The mammalian beta-tubulin repertoire: hematopoietic expression of a novel, heterologous beta-tubulin isotype.

1986 ◽  
Vol 103 (5) ◽  
pp. 1903-1910 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Wang ◽  
A Villasante ◽  
S A Lewis ◽  
N J Cowan

We describe the structure of a novel and unusually heterologous beta-tubulin isotype (M beta 1) isolated from a mouse bone marrow cDNA library, and a second isotype (M beta 3) isolated from a mouse testis cDNA library. Comparison of M beta 1 and M beta 3 with the completed (M beta 4, M beta 5) or extended (M beta 2) sequence of three previously described beta-tubulin isotypes shows that each includes a distinctive carboxy-terminal region, in addition to multiple amino acid substitutions throughout the polypeptide chain. In every case where a mammalian interspecies comparison can be made, both the carboxy-terminal and internal amino acid substitutions that distinguish one isotype from another are absolutely conserved. We conclude that these characteristic differences are important in determining functional distinctions between different kinds of microtubule. The amino acid homologies between M beta 2, M beta 3, M beta 4, and M beta 5 are in the range of 95-97%; however the homology between M beta 1 and all the other isotypes is very much less (78%). The dramatic divergence in M beta 1 is due to multiple changes that occur throughout the polypeptide chain. The overall level of expression of M beta 1 is low, and is restricted to those tissues (bone marrow, spleen, developing liver and lung) that are active in hematopoiesis in the mouse. We predict that the M beta 1 isotype is functionally specialized for assembly into the mammalian marginal band.

1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 3418-3428
Author(s):  
W Gu ◽  
N J Cowan

beta-Tubulin synthesis in eucaryotic cells is subject to control by an autoregulatory posttranscriptional mechanism in which the first four amino acids of the beta-tubulin polypeptide act either directly or indirectly to control the stability of beta-tubulin mRNA. To investigate the contribution of this amino-terminal domain to microtubule assembly and dynamics, we introduced a series of deletions encompassing amino acids 2 to 5 of a single mammalian beta-tubulin isotype, M beta 1. Constructs carrying such deletions were inserted into an expression vector, and the ability of the altered polypeptide to coassemble into microtubules was tested by using an anti-M beta 1-specific antibody. We show that the M beta 1 beta-tubulin polypeptide was competent for coassembly into microtubules in transient transfection experiments and in stably transfected cell lines when it lacked either amino acid 2 or amino acids 2 and 3. The capacity of these mutant beta-tubulins to coassemble into polymerized microtubules was only slightly diminished relative to that of unaltered beta-tubulin, and their expression did not influence the viability or growth properties of cell lines carrying these deletions. However, more extensive amino-terminal deletions either severely compromised or abolished the capacity for coassembly. In analogous experiments in which alterations were introduced into the amino-terminal domain of a mammalian alpha-tubulin isotype, M alpha 4, deletion of amino acid 2 did not affect the ability of the altered polypeptide to coassemble, although removal of additional amino-terminal residues essentially abolished the capacity for competent coassembly. The stability of the altered assembly-competent alpha- and beta-tubulin polypeptides was measured in pulse-chase experiments and found to be indistinguishable from the stability of the corresponding unaltered polypeptides. An assembly-competent M alpha 4 polypeptide carrying a deletion encompassing the 12 carboxy-terminal amino acids also had a half-life indistinguishable from that of the wild-type alpha-tubulin molecule. These data suggest that the universally conserved amino terminus of beta-tubulin acts largely in a regulatory role and that the carboxy-terminal domain of alpha-tubulin is not essential for coassembly in mammalian cells in vivo.


1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 3418-3428 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Gu ◽  
N J Cowan

beta-Tubulin synthesis in eucaryotic cells is subject to control by an autoregulatory posttranscriptional mechanism in which the first four amino acids of the beta-tubulin polypeptide act either directly or indirectly to control the stability of beta-tubulin mRNA. To investigate the contribution of this amino-terminal domain to microtubule assembly and dynamics, we introduced a series of deletions encompassing amino acids 2 to 5 of a single mammalian beta-tubulin isotype, M beta 1. Constructs carrying such deletions were inserted into an expression vector, and the ability of the altered polypeptide to coassemble into microtubules was tested by using an anti-M beta 1-specific antibody. We show that the M beta 1 beta-tubulin polypeptide was competent for coassembly into microtubules in transient transfection experiments and in stably transfected cell lines when it lacked either amino acid 2 or amino acids 2 and 3. The capacity of these mutant beta-tubulins to coassemble into polymerized microtubules was only slightly diminished relative to that of unaltered beta-tubulin, and their expression did not influence the viability or growth properties of cell lines carrying these deletions. However, more extensive amino-terminal deletions either severely compromised or abolished the capacity for coassembly. In analogous experiments in which alterations were introduced into the amino-terminal domain of a mammalian alpha-tubulin isotype, M alpha 4, deletion of amino acid 2 did not affect the ability of the altered polypeptide to coassemble, although removal of additional amino-terminal residues essentially abolished the capacity for competent coassembly. The stability of the altered assembly-competent alpha- and beta-tubulin polypeptides was measured in pulse-chase experiments and found to be indistinguishable from the stability of the corresponding unaltered polypeptides. An assembly-competent M alpha 4 polypeptide carrying a deletion encompassing the 12 carboxy-terminal amino acids also had a half-life indistinguishable from that of the wild-type alpha-tubulin molecule. These data suggest that the universally conserved amino terminus of beta-tubulin acts largely in a regulatory role and that the carboxy-terminal domain of alpha-tubulin is not essential for coassembly in mammalian cells in vivo.


1985 ◽  
Vol 101 (3) ◽  
pp. 852-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
S A Lewis ◽  
M G Lee ◽  
N J Cowan

We describe five mouse tubulin cloned cDNAs, two (M alpha 1 and M alpha 2) that encode alpha-tubulin and three (M beta 2, M beta 4, and M beta 5) that encode beta-tubulin. The sequence of these clones reveals that each represents a distinct gene product. Within the sequence common to the two alpha-tubulin cDNAs, the encoded amino acids are identical, though the 3' noncoding regions are wholly dissimilar. In contrast, the three beta-tubulin cDNAs show considerable carboxy-terminal heterogeneity. Two of the beta-tubulin isotypes defined by the cloned sequences are absolutely conserved between mouse and human, and all three beta-tubulin isotypes are conserved between mouse and rat. This result implies the existence of selective constraints that have maintained sequence identity after species divergence. This conclusion is reinforced by the near identity between a third mouse beta-tubulin isotype and a chicken beta-tubulin isotype. The significance of the interspecies conservation of tubulin isotypes is discussed in relationship to microtubule function. We have used non-cross-hybridizing 3' noncoding region probes from the five cloned mouse tubulin cDNAs to study the developmental expression of each isotype in various mouse tissues. M alpha 1 and M beta 2 are expressed in an approximately coordinate fashion, and their transcripts are most abundant in brain and lung. M alpha 2 and M beta 5 are ubiquitously expressed and to a similar extent in each tissue, with the greatest abundance in spleen, thymus, and immature brain. In contrast, M beta 4 is expressed exclusively in brain. Whereas the expression of the latter isotype increases dramatically during postnatal development, transcripts from all four other tubulin genes decline from maximum levels at or before birth. Tissue-specific development changes in the abundance of tubulin isotype-specific mRNAs are discussed in relationship to organogenesis in the mouse.


1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (5) ◽  
pp. 1754-1760 ◽  
Author(s):  
K F Sullivan ◽  
D W Cleveland

The nucleotide sequence of a chicken genomic DNA segment containing the chicken beta 4 tubulin gene has been determined. The predicted amino acid sequence of beta 4 is surprisingly divergent from that of the chicken beta 2 gene that encodes the dominant neural beta tubulin. beta 4 differs from beta 2 at 36 residue positions and encodes a polypeptide that is four amino acids longer, yielding a divergence of 8.9% between the two beta tubulin isotypes. While many of the amino acid substitutions are conservative, several involve significant alteration in the physiochemical properties of the residue. Furthermore, the amino acid substitution positions are not randomly located within the primary sequence but are distinctly clustered: major divergence occurs in the carboxy-terminal region beyond residue 430 and within the second protein coding exon segments of the genes. In addition, large regions of absolute sequence conservation are also present. Certain sequences within the heterogeneous regions are conserved in other species, indicating that these regions are under positive evolutionary selection pressure and are therefore probably essential for some aspect of beta-tubulin function. These findings strongly suggest that regional amino acid sequence heterogeneity may play an important role in the establishment of functionally differentiated beta tubulin polypeptides.


Genetics ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 139 (1) ◽  
pp. 267-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
J D Fackenthal ◽  
J A Hutchens ◽  
F R Turner ◽  
E C Raff

Abstract We have determined the lesions in a number of mutant alleles of beta Tub85D, the gene that encodes the testis-specific beta 2-tubulin isoform in Drosophila melanogaster. Mutations responsible for different classes of functional phenotypes are distributed throughout the beta 2-tubulin molecule. There is a telling correlation between the degree of phylogenetic conservation of the altered residues and the number of different microtubule categories disrupted by the lesions. The majority of lesions occur at positions that are evolutionarily highly conserved in all beta-tubulins; these lesions disrupt general functions common to multiple classes of microtubules. However, a single allele B2t6 contains an amino acid substitution within an internal cluster of variable amino acids that has been identified as an isotype-defining domain in vertebrate beta-tubulins. Correspondingly, B2t6 disrupts only a subset of microtubule functions, resulting in misspecification of the morphology of the doublet microtubules of the sperm tail axoneme. We previously demonstrated that beta 3, a developmentally regulated Drosophila beta-tubulin isoform, confers the same restricted morphological phenotype in a dominant way when it is coexpressed in the testis with wild-type beta 2-tubulin. We show here by complementation analysis that beta 3 and the B2t6 product disrupt a common aspect of microtubule assembly. We therefore conclude that the amino acid sequence of the beta 2-tubulin internal variable region is required for generation of correct axoneme morphology but not for general microtubule functions. As we have previously reported, the beta 2-tubulin carboxy terminal isotype-defining domain is required for suprastructural organization of the axoneme. We demonstrate here that the beta 2 variant lacking the carboxy terminus and the B2t6 variant complement each other for mild-to-moderate meiotic defects but do not complement for proper axonemal morphology. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis drawn from comparisons of vertebrate beta-tubulins that the two isotype-defining domains interact in a three-dimensional structure in wild-type beta-tubulins. We propose that the integrity of this structure in the Drosophila testis beta 2-tubulin isoform is required for proper axoneme assembly but not necessarily for general microtubule functions. On the basis of our observations we present a model for regulation of axoneme microtubule morphology as a function of tubulin assembly kinetics.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 2231-2242 ◽  
Author(s):  
J E Rudolph ◽  
M Kimble ◽  
H D Hoyle ◽  
M A Subler ◽  
E C Raff

The genomic DNA sequence and deduced amino acid sequence are presented for three Drosophila melanogaster beta-tubulins: a developmentally regulated isoform beta 3-tubulin, the wild-type testis-specific isoform beta 2-tubulin, and an ethyl methanesulfonate-induced assembly-defective mutation of the testis isoform, B2t8. The testis-specific beta 2-tubulin is highly homologous to the major vertebrate beta-tubulins, but beta 3-tubulin is considerably diverged. Comparison of the amino acid sequences of the two Drosophila isoforms to those of other beta-tubulins indicates that these two proteins are representative of an ancient sequence divergence event which at least preceded the split between lines leading to vertebrates and invertebrates. The intron/exon structures of the genes for beta 2- and beta 3-tubulin are not the same. The structure of the gene for the variant beta 3-tubulin isoform, but not that of the testis-specific beta 2-tubulin gene, is similar to that of vertebrate beta-tubulins. The mutation B2t8 in the gene for the testis-specific beta 2-tubulin defines a single amino acid residue required for normal assembly function of beta-tubulin. The sequence of the B2t8 gene is identical to that of the wild-type gene except for a single nucleotide change resulting in the substitution of lysine for glutamic acid at residue 288. This position falls at the junction between two major structural domains of the beta-tubulin molecule. Although this hinge region is relatively variable in sequence among different beta-tubulins, the residue corresponding to glu 288 of Drosophila beta 2-tubulin is highly conserved as an acidic amino acid not only in all other beta-tubulins but in alpha-tubulins as well.


1994 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 569-577 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Van Vlasselaer ◽  
B Borremans ◽  
U van Gorp ◽  
JR Dasch ◽  
R De Waal-Malefyt

Interleukin 10 (IL-10) suppressed TGF-beta synthesis in mouse bone marrow cultures. Coincidingly, IL-10 down-regulated the production of bone proteins including alkaline phosphatase (ALP), collagen and osteocalcin, and the formation of mineralized extracellular matrix. The mAb 1D11.16 which neutralizes TGF-beta 1 and TGF-beta 2, induced suppressive effects comparable to IL-10 when administered before the increase of cell proliferation in the culture. It appears that mainly TGF-beta 1 plays a role in this system since (a) TGF-beta 2 levels were undetectable in supernatants from osteogenic cultures, (b) no effect was observed when the anti-TGF-beta 2 neutralizing mAb 4C7.11 was added and (c) the suppressive effect of IL-10 could be reversed by adding exogenous TGF-beta 1. It is unlikely that TGF-beta 1 modulates osteogenic differentiation by changing the proliferative potential of marrow cells since 1D11.16 did not affect [3H]thymidine ([3H]TdR) incorporation or the number of fibroblast colony forming cells (CFU-F) which harbor the osteoprogenitor cell population. Furthermore, 1D11.16 did not alter [3H]TdR uptake by the cloned osteoprogenitor cell lines MN7 and MC3T3. Light and scanning electron microscopy showed that IL-10 and 1D11.16 induced comparable morphological changes in the marrow cultures. Control cultures contained flat adherent cells embedded in a mineralized matrix. In contrast, IL-10 and 1D11.16 treated cultures were characterized by round non-adherent cells and the absence of a mineralized matrix. In this study, the mechanism by which IL-10 suppresses the osteogenic differentiation of mouse bone marrow was identified as inhibition of TGF-beta 1 production which is essential for osteogenic commitment of bone marrow cells.


1988 ◽  
Vol 106 (6) ◽  
pp. 2023-2033 ◽  
Author(s):  
S A Lewis ◽  
N J Cowan

In the accompanying paper (Gu, W., S. A. Lewis, and N. J. Cowan. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 106: 2011-2022), we report the generation of three antisera, each of which uniquely recognizes a different mammalian alpha-tubulin isotype, plus a fourth antibody that distinguishes between microtubules containing the tyrosinated and nontyrosinated form of the only known mammalian alpha-tubulin gene product that lacks an encoded carboxy-terminal tyrosine residue. These sera, together with five sera we raised that distinguish among the known mammalian beta-tubulin isotypes, have been used to study patterns of tubulin isotype-specific expression in muscle and testis, two tissues in which characteristic developmental changes are accompanied by dramatic rearrangements in microtubule structures. As in the case of cells in culture, there is no evidence to suggest that there is subcellular sorting of different tubulin isotypes among different kinds of microtubule, even in a cell type (the developing spermatid) that simultaneously contains such functionally distinct structures as the manchette and the flagellum. On the other hand, the patterns of expression of the various tubulin isotypes show marked and distinctive differences in different cell types and, in at least one case, evidence is presented for regulation at the translational or posttranslational level. The significance of these observations is discussed in terms of the existence of the mammalian alpha- and beta-tubulin multigene families.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 2231-2242
Author(s):  
J E Rudolph ◽  
M Kimble ◽  
H D Hoyle ◽  
M A Subler ◽  
E C Raff

The genomic DNA sequence and deduced amino acid sequence are presented for three Drosophila melanogaster beta-tubulins: a developmentally regulated isoform beta 3-tubulin, the wild-type testis-specific isoform beta 2-tubulin, and an ethyl methanesulfonate-induced assembly-defective mutation of the testis isoform, B2t8. The testis-specific beta 2-tubulin is highly homologous to the major vertebrate beta-tubulins, but beta 3-tubulin is considerably diverged. Comparison of the amino acid sequences of the two Drosophila isoforms to those of other beta-tubulins indicates that these two proteins are representative of an ancient sequence divergence event which at least preceded the split between lines leading to vertebrates and invertebrates. The intron/exon structures of the genes for beta 2- and beta 3-tubulin are not the same. The structure of the gene for the variant beta 3-tubulin isoform, but not that of the testis-specific beta 2-tubulin gene, is similar to that of vertebrate beta-tubulins. The mutation B2t8 in the gene for the testis-specific beta 2-tubulin defines a single amino acid residue required for normal assembly function of beta-tubulin. The sequence of the B2t8 gene is identical to that of the wild-type gene except for a single nucleotide change resulting in the substitution of lysine for glutamic acid at residue 288. This position falls at the junction between two major structural domains of the beta-tubulin molecule. Although this hinge region is relatively variable in sequence among different beta-tubulins, the residue corresponding to glu 288 of Drosophila beta 2-tubulin is highly conserved as an acidic amino acid not only in all other beta-tubulins but in alpha-tubulins as well.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2181-2181
Author(s):  
Marloes R. Tijssen ◽  
Franca di Summa ◽  
Sonja Van den Oudenrijn ◽  
Carlijn Voermans ◽  
C.Ellen Van der Schoot ◽  
...  

Abstract Congenital amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (CAMT) is a rare disorder that presents with severe thrombocytopenia and absence of megakaryocytes in the bone marrow. The disease may develop into bone marrow aplasia. In vitro, CD34-positive hematopoietic progenitor cells from CAMT patients did not show any megakaryocyte formation in a Tpo-driven expansion culture. We and others found genetic defects in the gene encoding the Tpo receptor, c-mpl (Van den Oudenrijn et al., Br J Haematol.2002, 117: 390–398 and Ballmaier et al., Ann N Y Acad Sci.2003, 996: 17–25). In our patients, we found four mutations that predicted amino-acid substitutions, of which three in the extracellular domain; Arg102Pro, Pro136His and Arg257Cys, and one in the intracellular signaling domain (Pro635Leu), which may result in either defective Tpo-binding and/or signaling. To investigate this, we transfected full-length Mpl (wt and mutants) into the erythroleukemic cell line K562 and truncated Mpl (encompassing the extracellular domain; wt and mutants) into Baby Hamster Kidney (BHK) cells. In the K562 cells, the mRNA level (RQ-PCR) of the Pro136His mutant was severely decreased compared to the wt transfectant, while the mRNA level of the other mutants was comparable to that of wt. On Western blot, wt Mpl migrated as two, presumably differently glycosylated, bands of 75 kD and 72 kD. The mutants showed an altered migration pattern, which might result from differences in glycosylation. With the Pro635Leu mutant lower signals were obtained when equal amounts of total protein were loaded. Since the Mpl mRNA level was comparable to that of wt, this suggests a higher level of protein degradation. Upon transfection of the Arg102Pro and the Arg257Cys mutants in BHK cells, we observed that these mutants did not gain endo-H resistency, which suggests an aberrant processing of these mutant Mpls through the Golgi apparatus and retention in the ER. However, in cell fractionation experiments with surface-biotinylated K562 cells, biotinylated wt Mpl and mutant Mpl (except Pro136His) could be detected. Apparently, in K562 cells, the amino-acid substitutions do not impair membrane expression completely. To examine whether the mutant receptors were still able to signal after Tpo incubation, K562 cells were serum-starved and subsequently stimulated with 50 ng/ml rhTpo for 5 to 30 minutes. All mutants, including Pro136His, showed increased ERK phosphorylation after 5 minutes. To summarize, the Pro136His mutant is hardly expressed in the K562 expression model, presumably because of instability of the mRNA, but is still able to induce signaling. In contrast to the results obtained in the BHK model, the Arg102Pro and Arg257Cys mutants, showed cell-surface expression in the K562 cell line. The obtained cell-surface expression in the K562 model may have been significantly increased compared to the in vivo situation on hematopoietic stem cells, because of artificially induced efficient expression. Finally, with a super-physiological concentration of rhTpo, we obtained evidence that all Mpl mutants were able to signal upon Tpo binding. Whether impaired signaling by the Mpl mutants in the presence of physiological levels of Tpo may contribute to the development of CAMT, will be investigated.


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