Blog Archive

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

09-14-2021-0427 - Tubulin

Tubulin in molecular biology can refer either to the tubulin protein superfamily of globular proteins, or one of the member proteins of that superfamily. α- and β-tubulins polymerize into microtubules, a major component of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton.[1]Microtubules function in many essential cellular processes, including mitosisTubulin-binding drugs kill cancerous cells by inhibiting microtubule dynamics, which are required for DNA segregation and therefore cell division.

In eukaryotes there are six members of the tubulin superfamily, although not all are present in all species (see below).[2][3] Both α and β tubulins have a mass of around 50 kDa and are thus in a similar range compared to actin (with a mass of ~42 kDa). In contrast, tubulin polymers (microtubules) tend to be much bigger than actin filaments due to their cylindrical nature.

Tubulin was long thought to be specific to eukaryotes. More recently, however, several prokaryotic proteins have been shown to be related to tubulin.[4][5][6][7]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubulin


Proteins of the cytoskeleton

showvte

Hydrolases: acid anhydride hydrolases (EC 3.6)

showvte

Protein: nerve tissue protein

show

Authority control Edit this at Wikidata

Categories: ProteinsCytoskeleton 



No comments:

Post a Comment