Microtubule catastrophe from protofilament dynamics
Jemseena V., Manoj Gopalakrishnan (Department of Physics, IIT, Madras)

TL;DR
This paper models the stochastic dynamics of GTP-tubulin caps on protofilaments to understand microtubule catastrophe, revealing that loss in 2-3 protofilaments triggers filament transition from growth to shrinkage.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed stochastic model including hydrolysis and dissociation, extending previous models to predict microtubule catastrophe based on protofilament dynamics.
Findings
Loss of GTP cap in 2-3 protofilaments triggers catastrophe.
Protofilament catastrophe behavior is similar across different models at high growth velocities.
Model predictions align with experimental observations.
Abstract
The disappearance of the guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-tubulin cap is widely believed to be the forerunner event for the growth-shrinkage transition (`catastrophe') in microtubule filaments in eukaryotic cells. We study a discrete version of a stochastic model of the GTP cap dynamics, originally proposed by Flyvbjerg, Holy and Leibler (Flyvbjerg, Holy and Leibler, Phys. Rev. Lett. 73, 2372, 1994). Our model includes both spontaneous and vectorial hydrolysis, as well as dissociation of a non-hydrolyzed dimer from the filament after incorporation. In the first part of the paper, we apply this model to a single protofilament of a microtubule. A catastrophe transition is defined for each protofilament, similar to the earlier one-dimensional models, the frequency of occurrence of which is then calculated under various conditions, but without explicit assumption of steady state conditions.…
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