Abstract

Mutations in the family of genes encoding the tubulin subunits of microtubules are associated with a spectrum of human brain malformations known as tubulinopathies. How these mutations impact tubulin activity to give rise to distinct developmental consequences is poorly understood. Here we report two patients exhibiting brain malformations characteristic of tubulinopathies and heterozygous T178M missense mutations in different β-tubulin genes, TUBB2A or TUBB3. RNAseq analysis indicates that both TUBB2A and TUBB3 are expressed in the brain during development, but only TUBB2A maintains high expression in neurons into adulthood. The T178 residue is highly conserved in β-tubulins and located in the exchangeable GTP-binding pocket of β-tubulin. To determine the impact of T178M on β-tubulin function we created an analogous mutation in the β-tubulin of budding yeast and show that the substitution acts dominantly to produce kinetically stabilized microtubules that assemble and disassemble slowly, with fewer transitions between these states. In vitro experiments with purified mutant tubulin demonstrate that T178M decreases the intrinsic assembly activity of β-tubulin and forms microtubules that rarely transition to disassembly. We provide evidence that the T178M substitution disrupts GTPase-dependent conformational changes in tubulin, providing a mechanistic explanation for kinetic stabilization. Our findings demonstrate the importance of tubulin’s GTPase activity during brain development, and indicate that tubulin isotypes play different, important roles during brain development.

Highlights

  • Tubulin is the protein building block of the microtubule cytoskeleton and accounts for 25% of total protein in the mammalian brain, by far the most abundant GTPase in the brain (Hiller and Weber, 1978)

  • Our results show that T178M weakens the assembly activity of purified tubulin protein, but when expressed as a heterozygous mutation in cells promotes the formation of stable microtubules with diminished dynamic instability

  • We considered two hypotheses to explain the hypersensitivity of tub2-T178M heterozygotes to benomyl and nocodazole: either the destabilizing drugs act in an additive fashion with the T178M mutation to suppress microtubule dynamics, or T178M causes underproduction of tubulin protein that leads to a higher proportion of drug-bound tubulin in the cells

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Summary

Introduction

Tubulin is the protein building block of the microtubule cytoskeleton and accounts for 25% of total protein in the mammalian brain, by far the most abundant GTPase in the brain (Hiller and Weber, 1978). The second GTP binds to the so-called exchangeable site on β-tubulin, is hydrolyzed during assembly into microtubules and exchanges when tubulin is in solution (Kobayashi, 1975; Nogales et al, 1998). GTPase activity at the exchangeable site controls a switch in tubulin conformation that creates a six-fold greater microtubule association for the GTP-bound state (Carlier and Pantaloni, 1978). These differences in assembly kinetics drive dynamic instability, the ability of microtubules to stochastically transition between phases of growth and shortening, that permit rapid generation and remodeling of the microtubule cytoskeleton

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