1. Academic Validation
  2. Integrators of the cytoskeleton that stabilize microtubules

Integrators of the cytoskeleton that stabilize microtubules

  • Cell. 1999 Jul 23;98(2):229-38. doi: 10.1016/s0092-8674(00)81017-x.
Y Yang 1 C Bauer G Strasser R Wollman J P Julien E Fuchs
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
Abstract

Sensory neurodegeneration occurs in mice defective in BPAG1, a gene encoding cytoskeletal linker proteins capable of anchoring neuronal intermediate filaments to actin Cytoskeleton. While BPAG1 null mice fail to anchor neurofilaments (NFs), BPAG1/NF null mice still degenerate in the absence of NFs. We report a novel neural splice form that lacks the actin-binding domain and instead binds and stabilizes microtubules. This interaction is functionally important; in mice and in vitro, neurons lacking BPAG1 display short, disorganized, and unstable microtubules defective in axonal transport. Ironically, BPAG1 neural isoforms represent microtubule-associated proteins that when absent lead to devastating consequences. Moreover, BPAG1 can functionally account for the extraordinary stability of axonal microtubules necessary for transport over long distances. Its isoforms interconnect all three cytoskeletal networks, a feature apparently central to neuronal survival.

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