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Feb 26, 2019

Seminar - Using recombinant human tubulin to dissect the structure and function of the microtubules with different tubulin isotypes (Speaker: Dr. Shih-Chieh Ti)

Dr. Shih-Chieh Ti
The Rockefeller University, USA

Date: Tuesday, 26-February-2019
Time: 10:00 a.m.
Venue: Seminar Room 1-19, 1/F, Laboratory Block, Faculty of Medicine Building
21 Sassoon Road, Pokfulam, Hong Kong

Summary:
α/β-tubulin heterodimers polymerize into microtubules that are central to cellular processes, such as cell division, cell migration, and organelle transportation. The human genome encodes at least nine α- and ten β-tubulin gene families (i.e., isotypes). However, even with studies for more than five decades, the biological function and properties of human tubulin isotypes are currently not clear. This knowledge gap is mainly due to the challenge facing the field to generate recombinant human tubulin of specific isotypes. To fill this knowledge gap, I developed a long-sought strategy for generating recombinant human tubulin of specific isotypes. I discovered that changes in the primary sequences of nanometer-size tubulin (i.e., disease-related point mutations or tubulin isotypes) could control the polymerization dynamics, the stability, and the tubulin subunit organization of micrometer-scale polymers. My work on recombinant human tubulin opens a new avenue for answering the biological questions that have puzzled the field for decades.

ALL ARE WELCOME