BISIG CARLOS GASTON
Congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Post-translational incorporation of the antiproliferative agent azatyrosine into the C-terminus of α-tubulin.
Autor/es:
PURRO, S.A., BISIG, C.G., BARRA, H.S. AND ARCE, C.A
Lugar:
Gosau, Austria
Reunión:
Congreso; Fronteins in Cytoskeleton Research; 2003
Resumen:
Detyrosination/tyrosination of tubulin is a post-translational modification that occurs at the C-terminus of the α-subunit, giving rise to microtubules rich in either tyrosinated or detyrosinated tubulin which coexist in the cell. We hereby report that the tyrosine analogue, azatyrosine, can be incorporated into the C-terminus of α-tubulin instead of tyrosine. Azatyrosine is structurally identical to tyrosine except that a nitrogen atom replaces carbon 2 of the phenolic group. Azatyrosine competitively excluded incorporation of [14C]tyrosine into tubulin of soluble brain extract. A newly-developed rabbit antibody specific to C-terminal azatyrosine was used to study incorporation of azatyrosine in cultured cells. When added to the culture medium (Ham's F12K), azatyrosine was incorporated into tubulin of glioma-derived C6 cells. This incorporation was reversible, i.e., after withdrawal of azatyrosine, tubulin lost azatyrosine and reincorporated tyrosine. Azatyrosinated tubulin self-assembled into microtubules to a similar degree as total tubulin both in vitro and in vivo. Studies by other groups have shown that treatment of certain types of cultured cancer cells with azatyrosine leads to reversion of phenotype to normal, and that administration of azatyrosine into animals harboring human proto-oncogenic c-Ha-ras prevents tumor formation. These interesting observations led us to study this phenomenon in relation to tubulin status. Under conditions in which tubulin was mostly azatyrosinated, C6 cells remained viable but did not proliferate. After 7-10 days under these conditions, morphology changed from a fused, elongated shape to a rounded soma with thin processes. Incorporation of azatyrosine into the C-terminus of α-tubulin is proposed as one possible cause of reversion of the malignant phenotype.