TCP1 complex is a molecular chaperone in tubulin biogenesis

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Abstract

A ROLE in folding of newly translated proteins in the cytosol of eukaryotes has been proposed for t-complex polypeptide-1 (TCP1), although its molecular targets have not yet been identified1-3 Tubulin is a major cytosolic protein whose assembly into microtubules is critical to many cellular processes4-8. Although numerous studies have focused on the expression of tubulin9-20, little is known about the processes whereby newly translated tubulin subunits acquire conformations that enable them to form α-β-heterodimers. We examined the biogenesis of α- and β-tubulin in rabbit reticulocyte lysate, and report here that newly translated tubulin subunits entered a 900K complex in a protease-sensitive conformation. Addition of Mg-ATP, but not nonhydrolysable analogues, released the tubulin subunits as assembly-competent protein with a conformation that was relatively protease-resistant. The 900K complex purified from reticulocyte lysate contained as its major constituent a 58K protein that cross-reacted with a monoclonal antiserum against mouse TCP1. We conclude that TCP1 functions as a cytosolic chaperone in the biogenesis of tubulin. © 1992 Nature Publishing Group.

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Yaffe, M. B., Farr, G. W., Miklos, D., Horwich, A. L., Sternlicht, M. L., & Sternlicht, H. (1992). TCP1 complex is a molecular chaperone in tubulin biogenesis. Nature, 358(6383), 245–248. https://doi.org/10.1038/358245a0

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