The stability, refolding, and assembly properties of FtsZ cell division proteins from Methanococcus jannaschii and Escherichia coli have been investigated. Their guanidinium chloride unfolding has been studied by circular dichroism spectroscopy. FtsZ from E. coli and tubulin released the bound guanine nucleotide, coinciding with an initial unfolding stage at low denaturant concentrations, followed by unfolding of the apoprotein. FtsZ from M. jannaschii released its nucleotide without any detectable secondary structural change. It unfolded in an apparently two-state transition at larger denaturant concentrations. Isolated FtsZ polypeptide chains were capable of spontaneous refolding and GTP-dependent assembly. The homologous eukaryotic tubulin monomers misfold in solution, but fold within the cytosolic chaperonin CCT. Analysis of the extensive tubulin loop insertions in the FtsZ/tubulin common core and of the intermolecular contacts in model microtubules and tubulin-CCT complexes shows