APS March Meeting 2015
Volume 60, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2015;
San Antonio, Texas
Session B48: Focus Session: Physics of Protein Interactions
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Monday, March 2, 2015
Room: 217C
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBIO
Chair: Megan Valentine, University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.MAR.B48.4
Abstract: B48.00004 : Dissecting EB1-microtubule interactions from every direction: using single-molecule visualization and static and dynamic binding measurements
11:51 AM–12:27 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Benjamin Lopez
(Univ of California - Santa Barbara)
EB1 is an important microtubule associating protein (MAP) that acts as a
master coordinator of protein activity at the growing plus-end of the
microtubule. We can recapitulate the plus-end binding behavior of EB1 along
the entire length of a static microtubule using microtubules polymerized in
the presence of the nonhydrolyzable GTP analogs GMPCPP and GTP$\gamma $S
instead of GTP. Through the use of single-molecule TIRF imaging we find that
EB1 is highly dynamic (with a sub-second characteristic binding lifetime)
and continuously diffusive while bound to the microtubule. We measure the
diffusion coefficient, $D$, through linear fitting to mean-squared displacement
of individually labeled proteins, and the binding lifetime, $\tau $, by
fitting a single exponential decay to the probability distribution of
trajectory lifetimes. In agreement with measurements of other diffusive
MAPs, we find that $D$ increases and $\tau $ decreases with increasing ionic
strength. We also find that $D$ is sensitive to the choice of GTP analog: EB1
proteins bound to GTP$\gamma $S polymerized microtubules have a $D$ half of
that found with GMPCPP polymerized microtubules. To compare these
single-molecule measurements to the bulk binding behavior of EB1, we use
TIRF imaging to measure the intensity of microtubules coated with EB1-GFP as
a function of EB1 concentration. We find that EB1 binding is cooperative and
both the quantity of EB1 bound and the dissociation constant are sensitive
to GTP analog and ionic concentration. The correlation between binding
affinity and $D$ and the cooperative nature of EB1-microtubule binding leads to
a decrease in $D$ with increasing EB1 concentration. Interestingly, we also
find an increase in $\tau $ at high EB1 concentrations, consistent with
attractive EB1-microtubule interactions driving the cooperativity. To
further understand the nature of the cooperativity we estimate the
interaction energy by measuring the association and dissociation rates
($k_{\mathrm{on}}$ and $k_{\mathrm{off}}$ respectively) at different
concentrations of EB1.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.MAR.B48.4