Microtubules (MTs) are essential cellular machines built
from concatenated
αβ-tubulin heterodimers. They are responsible for two
central and opposite functions from the dynamic point of view: scaffolding
(static filaments) and force generation (dynamic MTs). These roles
engage multiple physiological processes, including cell shape, polarization,
division and movement, and intracellular long-distance transport.
At the most basic level, the MT regulation is chemical because GTP
binding and hydrolysis have the ability to promote assembly and disassembly
in the absence of any other constraint. Due to the stochastic GTP
hydrolysis, a chemical gradient from GTP-bound to GDP-bound tubulin
is created at the MT growing end (GTP cap), which is translated into
a cascade of structural regulatory changes known as MT maturation.
This is an area of intense research, and several models have been
proposed based on information mostly gathered from macromolecular
crystallography and cryo-electron microscopy studies. However, these
classical structural biology methods lack temporal resolution and
can be complemented, as shown in this mini-review, by other approaches
such as time-resolved fiber diffraction and computational modeling.
Together with studies on structurally similar tubulins from the prokaryotic
world, these inputs can provide novel insights on MT assembly, dynamics,
and the GTP cap.