Kinesin-induced buckling reveals the limits of microtubule self-repair

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Abstract

Microtubules are stiff cytoskeletal polymers whose ability to rapidly switch between growth and disassembly relies on a metastable lattice. This metastability is also reflected in their sensitivity to environmental conditions and in intrinsic lattice dynamics, where spontaneous tubulin loss is balanced by tubulin incorporation from solution – a process that also enables microtubules to self-repair when damaged. Whether such intrinsic self-repair is sufficient to preserve microtubule integrity during dynamic molecular-motor induced buckling, which frequently occurs in cells, remains unclear. Here, we show that kinesin-driven microtubule buckling in vitro induces severe lattice damage, leading to extensive tubulin incorporation. In many cases, however, the damage exceeds the microtubules’ capacity for self-repair, resulting in breakage. In contrast, microtubules survive continuous buckling substantially longer in the presence of intracellular factors. Our results identify the limits of intrinsic microtubule self-repair and demonstrate that additional cellular mechanisms are essential to maintain microtubule integrity under sustained mechanical load.

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