Pure rat brain tubulin can be cross-linked by ultraviolet irradiation of tubulin-colchicine complexes at the high-wavelength maximum of colchicine to form covalent dimers greater than trimers greater than tetramers. With colchicine concentrations approximately 3 x 10(-4) M (mole ratio to tubulin 3-12) and irradiation for 5-10 min at 95-109 mW/cm2, the yield of dimers is 11-17% and of trimers is 4-6% of the total tubulin. The oligomers show polydispersity and anomalously high apparent molecular masses that converge toward expected values in low-density gels. Maximal dimer yields are obtained with MTC and the decreasing photosensitizing potency is MTC greater than colchicine greater than colchicide greater than isocolchicine greater than thiocolchicine. Single-ring troponoids also promote dimerization. Evidence is presented suggesting that the initial, low-affinity, binding step of colchicine and its analogues is sufficient to photosensitize tubulin dimerization.
This study explored the biological autonomy and control of function in circumstances that assessed the presumed relationship of an organism with an environmental cycle. An understanding of this behavior appeals to the organism–environment system rather than just the organism. Therefore, we sought to uncover the laws underlying end-directed capabilities by measuring biological characteristics (motor synchrony) in an environmental cycle (circadian temperature). We found that the typical elementary coordination (bimanual) stability measure varied significantly as a function of the day–night temperature cycle. While circadian effects under artificially manipulated temperatures were not straightforward during the day–night temperature cycle, the circadian effect divided by the ordinary circadian rhythm remained constant during the day–night cycle. Our observation of this direct, robust relationship between the biological characteristics (body temperature and motor synchrony) and environmental processes (circadian temperature cycle) could mirror the adaptation of our biological system to the environment.
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