Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1926647 | Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Tau, a family of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), stabilizes microtubules (MTs) and regulates their dynamics. Tau isoforms regulate MT dynamic instability differently: 3-repeat tau is less effective than 4-repeat tau at suppressing the disassembly of MTs. Here, we report another tau-isoform-dependent phenomenon, revealed by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching measurements on a BODIPY-conjugated taxol bound to MTs. Saturating levels of recombinant full-length 3-repeat and 4-repeat tau both cause taxol mobility to be remarkably sensitive to taxol concentration. However, 3-repeat tau induces 2.5-fold faster recovery (∼450 s) at low taxol concentrations (∼100 nM) than 4-repeat tau (∼1000 s), indicating that 3-repeat tau decreases the probability of taxol rebinding to its site in the MT lumen. Finding no tau-induced change in the MT-binding affinity of taxol, we conclude that 3-repeat tau either competes for the taxol binding site with an affinity of ∼1 μM or alters the MT structure so as to facilitate the passage of taxol through pores in the MT wall.