Abstract

Microtubules are cytoskeletal structures critical for mitosis, cell motility, and protein and organelle transport and are a validated target for anticancer drugs. However, how tubulins are regulated and recruited to support these distinct cellular processes is incompletely understood. Posttranslational modifications of tubulins are proposed to regulate microtubule function and dynamics. Although many of these modifications have been investigated, only one prior study reports tubulin methylation and an enzyme responsible for this methylation. Here we used in vitro radiolabeling, MS, and immunoblotting approaches to monitor protein methylation and immunoprecipitation, immunofluorescence, and pulldown approaches to measure protein–protein interactions. We demonstrate that N-lysine methyltransferase 5A (KMT5A or SET8/PR-Set7), which methylates lysine 20 in histone H4, bound α-tubulin and methylated it at a specific lysine residue, Lys311. Furthermore, late SV40 factor (LSF)/CP2, a known transcription factor, bound both α-tubulin and SET8 and enhanced SET8-mediated α-tubulin methylation in vitro. In addition, we found that the ability of LSF to facilitate this methylation is countered by factor quinolinone inhibitor 1 (FQI1), a specific small-molecule inhibitor of LSF. These findings suggest the general model that microtubule-associated proteins, including transcription factors, recruit or stimulate protein-modifying enzymes to target tubulins. Moreover, our results point to dual functions for SET8 and LSF not only in chromatin regulation but also in cytoskeletal modification.

Highlights

  • Microtubules are cytoskeletal structures critical for mitosis, cell motility, and protein and organelle transport and are a validated target for anticancer drugs

  • SET8 mediates monomethylation of other substrates, including p53, which results in represmodification; microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), microtubule-associated protein; H4K20me1, monomethylated histone H4 on lys20; LSF, late SV40 factor; PCNA, proliferating cell nuclear antigen; MBP, maltose binding protein; K311me, monomethylated lys311; aa, amino acids; Ab, antibody; IB, immunoblot; DAPI, 4Ј,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole

  • The most obvious association was in G1 phase, when SET8 exhibited the same pattern as the filamentous tubulin distributed throughout the cytoplasm, emphasized by yellow in the merged image

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Summary

Introduction

Microtubules are cytoskeletal structures critical for mitosis, cell motility, and protein and organelle transport and are a validated target for anticancer drugs. We demonstrate that SET8 is a microtubule-associated methyltransferase that methylates Lys311 of ␣-tubulin in vitro.

Results
Conclusion

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