GSK3β phosphorylation modulates CLASP–microtubule association and lamella microtubule attachment

Praveen Kumar(University of California, San Francisco), Karen S. Lyle(University of California, San Francisco), Sarah Gierke(University of California, San Francisco), Alexandre Matov(Scripps Research Institute), Gaudenz Danuser(Scripps Research Institute), Torsten Wittmann(University of California, San Francisco)
The Journal of Cell Biology
March 16, 2009
Cited by 176Open Access
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Abstract

Polarity of the microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton is essential for many cell functions. Cytoplasmic linker-associated proteins (CLASPs) are MT-associated proteins thought to organize intracellular MTs and display a unique spatiotemporal regulation. In migrating epithelial cells, CLASPs track MT plus ends in the cell body but bind along MTs in the lamella. In this study, we demonstrate that glycogen synthase kinase 3beta (GSK3beta) directly phosphorylates CLASPs at multiple sites in the domain required for MT plus end tracking. Although complete phosphorylation disrupts both plus end tracking and association along lamella MTs, we show that partial phosphorylation of the identified GSK3beta motifs determines whether CLASPs track plus ends or associate along MTs. In addition, we find that expression of constitutively active GSK3beta destabilizes lamella MTs by disrupting lateral MT interactions with the cell cortex. GSK3beta-induced lamella MT destabilization was partially rescued by expression of CLASP2 with mutated phosphorylation sites. This indicates that CLASP-mediated stabilization of peripheral MTs, which likely occurs in the vicinity of focal adhesions, may be regulated by local GSK3beta inactivation.


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