Abstract
Centrosome-dependent microtubule nucleation involves the interaction of tubulin subunits with pericentriolar material. To study the biochemical and structural basis of centrosome-dependent microtubule nucleation, centrosomes capable of organizing microtubules into astral arrays were isolated from parthenogenetically activated Spisula solidissima oocytes. Intermediate voltage electron microscopy tomography revealed that each centrosome was composed of a single centriole surrounded by pericentriolar material that was studded with ring-shaped structures approximately 25 nm in diameter and <25 nm in length. A number of proteins copurified with centrosomes including: (a) proteins that contained M-phase-specific phosphoepitopes (MPM-2), (b) alpha-, beta-, and gamma-tubulins, (c) actin, and (d) three low molecular weight proteins of <20 kD. gamma-Tubulin was not an MPM-2 phosphoprotein and was the most abundant form of tubulin in centrosomes. Relatively little alpha- or beta-tubulin copurified with centrosomes, and the ratio of alpha- to beta-tubulin in centrosomes was not 1:1 as expected, but rather 1:4.6, suggesting that centrosomes contain beta-tubulin that is not dimerized with alpha-tubulin.
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