We have been able to purify, in bulk, the cytoplasmic microtubule proteins of eggs and embryos of Drosophila melanogaster by means of in vitro self-assembly of microtubules from subunits present in a high-speed supernatant fraction of eggs or embryos. This provides the first successful application of this method to purification of microtubule protein from a source other than vertebrate brain, and the first purification of insect microtubule proteins. Our electron micrographs show that the in vitro assembled microtubules are morphologically typical and apparently are comprised of the expected 13 protofilaments. The protein we obtain from such preparations binds [3H]colchicine and has a sedimentation value of 6.4 S-6.9 S which is close to the predicted value for microtubule protein dimer. Both alpha- and beta-microtubule proteins are evident in sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide electropherograms of the isolated proteins. The apparent molecular weights of these species on dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gels are 54,000 and 52,000, respectively. These values as well as the amino acid composition and N-terminal methionine of the Drosophilia proteins are very closely comparable to microtubule proteins from other, unrelated organisms.
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