Abstract

Identifying changes at the molecular level during the development of hepatocellular carcinoma is important for the detection and treatment of the disease. The characteristic structural reorganization of preneoplastic cells may involve changes in the microtubule cytoskeleton. Microtubules are dynamic protein polymers that play an essential role in cell division, maintenance of cell shape, vesicle transport, and motility. They are comprised of multiple isotypes of alpha- and beta-tubulin. Changes in the levels of these isotypes may affect not only microtubule stability and sensitivity to drugs but also interactions with endogenous proteins. We employed a rat liver cancer model that progresses through stages similar to those of human liver cancer, including metastasis to the lung, to identify changes in the tubulin cytoskeleton during carcinogenesis. Tubulin isotypes in both liver and lung tissue were purified and subsequently separated by isoelectric focusing electrophoresis. The C-terminal isotype-defining region from each tubulin was obtained by cyanogen bromide cleavage and identified by mass spectrometry. A novel post-translational modification of betaIVb-tubulin in which two hydrophobic residues are proteolyzed from the C-terminus, thus exposing a charged glutamic acid residue, was identified. The unique form of betaIVb-tubulin was quantified in the liver tissue of all carcinoma stages and found to be approximately 3-fold more abundant in nodular and tumor tissue than in control tissue. The level of this form was also found to be increased in lung tissue with liver metastasis. This modification alters the C-terminal domain of one of the most abundant beta-tubulin isotypes in the liver and therefore may affect the interactions of microtubules with endogenous proteins.

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