RRC ID 81284
Author Guo R, Fujito R, Nagasaki A, Okumura M, Chihara T, Hamao K.
Title Dynamin-2 regulates microtubule stability via an endocytosis-independent mechanism.
Journal Cytoskeleton (Hoboken)
Abstract Microtubule stability and dynamics regulations are essential for vital cellular processes, such as microtubule-dependent axonal transport. Dynamin is involved in many membrane fission events, such as clathrin-mediated endocytosis. The ubiquitously expressed dynamin-2 has been reported to regulate microtubule stability. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate the roles of intrinsic properties of dynamin-2 on microtubule regulation by rescue experiments. A heterozygous DNM2 mutation in HeLa cells was generated, and an increase in the level of stabilized microtubules in these heterozygous cells was observed. The expression of wild-type dynamin-2 in heterozygous cells reduced stabilized microtubules. Conversely, the expression of self-assembly-defective mutants of dynamin-2 in the heterozygous cells failed to decrease stabilized microtubules. This indicated that the self-assembling ability of dynamin-2 is necessary for regulating microtubule stability. Moreover, the heterozygous cells expressing the GTPase-defective dynamin-2 mutant, K44A, reduced microtubule stabilization, similar to the cells expressing wild-type dynamin-2, suggesting that GTPase activity of dynamin-2 is not essential for regulating microtubule stability. These results showed that the mechanism of microtubule regulation by dynamin-2 is diverse from that of endocytosis.
Volume 79(9-11)
Pages 94-104
Published 2022-9-1
DOI 10.1002/cm.21723
PMID 36053962
MeSH Dynamins* / genetics Endocytosis* / physiology GTP Phosphohydrolases / genetics GTP Phosphohydrolases / metabolism HeLa Cells Humans Microtubules* / metabolism
IF 1.7
Resource
Human and Animal Cells HeLa(RCB0007)