A Genetic Approach to Identify Proteins that Interact with Eukaryotic Microtubule Severing Proteins via a Yeast Two Hybrid System
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Abstract
Microtubules (MT) are regulated by multiple categories of proteins, including proteins
responsible for severing MTs that are therefore called MT-severing proteins. Studies of katanin,
spastin, and fidgetin in animal systems have clarified that these proteins are MT-severing.
However, studies in plants have been limited to katanin p60, and little is known about spastin or
fidgetin and their function in plants. I looked at plant genomes to identify MT-severing protein
homologues to clarify which severing proteins exist in plants. I obtained data from a variety of
eukaryotic species to look for MT-severing proteins using homology to human proteins and
analyzed these protein sequences to obtain information on the evolution of MT-severing proteins
in different species. I focused this analysis on MT-severing proteins in the maize and
Arabidopsis thaliana genomes. I created evolutionary phylogenetic trees for katanin-p60,
katanin-p80, spastin, and fidgetin using sequences from animal, plant, and fungal genomes. I
focused on Arabidopsis spastin and worked to understand its functionality by identifying protein
interaction partners. The yeast two-hybrid technique was used to screen an Arabidopsis cDNA
library to identify putative spastin interactors. I sought to confirm the putative protein
interactions by using molecular tools for protein localization such as the YFP system. Finally, a
Biomolecular Fluorescence Complementation (BiFC) assay was initiated as a proof of concept
for confirmation of in vivo protein-protein interaction.