Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : The inhibitory effect of calmodulin on the assembly of mature and immature rat brain microtubules was compared with that of the two major structural domains of this protein, the COOH-terminal fragment (amino acids 78-148) and the NH2-terminal fragment (amino acids 1-77), to determine the calmodulin structural domain responsible for the inhibitory effect on microtubule assembly. Microtubules prepared during the early stages of brain development, i.e., during intensive neurite outgrowth, are more sensitive to inhibition by the Ca2(+)-calmodulin complex than those obtained from adult brain. Significant inhibition of immature microtubule assembly was observed with both fragments in the absence of Ca2+, but the effects were more important when Ca2+ was present. With adult brain microtubules, the two fragments remained without effect on assembly in the absence of Ca2+, whereas some inhibition was seen in its presence but only with the COOH-terminal polypeptide. Under all these conditions, the COOH-terminal fragment was always more active than the NH2-terminal fragment on microtubule polymerization, albeit to a lesser extent than native calmodulin.