Coordination of the filament stabilizing versus destabilizing activities of cofilin through its secondary binding site on actin.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2014
Abstract
Cofilin is a ubiquitous modulator of actin cytoskeleton dynamics that can both stabilize and destabilize actin filaments depending on its concentration and/or the presence of regulatory co-factors. Three charge-reversal mutants of yeast cofilin, located in cofilin's filament-specific secondary binding site, were characterized in order to understand why disruption of this site leads to enhanced filament disassembly. Crystal structures of the mutants showed that the mutations specifically affect the secondary actin-binding interface, leaving the primary binding site unaltered. The mutant cofilins show enhanced activity compared to wild-type cofilin in severing and disassembling actin filaments. Electron microscopy and image analysis revealed long actin filaments in the presence of wild-type cofilin, while the mutants induced many short filaments, consistent with enhanced severing. Real-time fluorescence microscopy of labeled actin filaments confirmed that the mutants, unlike wild-type cofilin, were functioning as constitutively active severing proteins. In cells, the mutant cofilins delayed endocytosis, which depends on rapid actin turnover. We conclude that mutating cofilin's secondary actin-binding site increases cofilin's ability to sever and de-polymerize actin filaments. We hypothesize that activators of cofilin severing, like Aip1p, may act by disrupting the interface between cofilin's secondary actin-binding site and the actin filament.
Recommended Citation
Aggeli, Dimitra; Kish-Trier, Erik; Lin, Meng Chi; Haarer, Brian; Cingolani, Gino; Cooper, John A; Wilkens, Stephan; and Amberg, David C, "Coordination of the filament stabilizing versus destabilizing activities of cofilin through its secondary binding site on actin." (2014). Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Faculty Papers. Paper 88.
https://jdc.jefferson.edu/bmpfp/88
PubMed ID
24943913
Comments
This article has been peer reviewed. It was published in: Cytoskeleton.
Volume 71, Issue 6, June 2014, Pages 361-379.
The published version is available at DOI: 10.1002/cm.21178
Copyright © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.