Abstract9-(Dicyanovinyl) julolidine (DCVJ) is a fluorescent probe, which binds to a unique site on the tubulin dimer and exhibits different properties that are dependent upon its oligomeric state (Kung & Reed, 1989). DCVJ binds to tubulin, the tubulin-colchicine complex, and the tubulin-ruthenium red complex equally well, but binds tighter to the ANStubulin complex than to tubulin alone. The energy transfer studies indicate a small amount of energy transfer with colchicine, but a significant energy transfer with ANS. It was shown previously that ruthenium red binds near the C-terminal tail region of the a-subunit. Ruthenium red causes major quenching of fluorescence of the tubulin-DCVJ complex, suggesting proximity of binding sites.The derived distances are consistent with DCVJ binding near the a p interface, but on the opposite face of the colchicine binding site. Location of the binding site correlates with the observed effect of a different polymerized state of tubulin on the DCVJ spectroscopic properties. The effect of dimer-dimer association on DCVJ binding, at high protein concentrations (Kung & Reed, 1989), suggests that such an association may occur through lateral contacts of the elongated tubulin dimer, at least in a significant fraction of the cases. Transmission of ANS-induced conformational change to the DCVJ binding site, which is near important dimer-dimer contact sites, makes it possible that such conformational changes may be responsible for polymerization inhibition by anilino-naphthalene sulfonates.
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