Phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent tubulin-pyruvate kinase interaction at different organizational levels

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Abstract

Evidence for the direct binding of pyruvate kinase to tubulin/microtubule and for the inhibitory effect of phosphoenolpyruvate on tubulin-enzyme hetero-association were provided by surface plasmon resonance and pelleting experiments. Electron microscopy revealed that pyruvate kinase induces depolymerization of paclitaxel-stabilized microtubules into large oligomeric aggregates and bundles the tubules in a salt concentration-dependent manner. The C-terminal "tail"-free microtubules did not bind pyruvate kinase, suggesting the crucial role of the C-terminal segments in the binding of kinase. Immunoblotting and polymerization experiments with cell-free brain extract revealed that pyruvate kinase specifically binds to microtubules, the binding of pyruvate kinase impedes microtubule assembly, and phosphoenolpyruvate counteracts the destabilization of microtubules induced by pyruvate kinase. We also showed by immunostaining the juxtanuclear localization of pyruvate kinase in intact L929 cells and that this localization was influenced by treatments with paclitaxel or vinblastine. These findings suggest that the distribution of the enzyme may be controlled by the microtubular network in vivo.

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Kovács, J., Löw, P., Pácz, A., Horváth, I., Oláh, J., & Ovádi, J. (2003). Phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent tubulin-pyruvate kinase interaction at different organizational levels. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(9), 7126–7130. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M210244200

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