Control of actin dynamics by proteins made of beta-thymosin repeats: the actobindin family |
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Authors: | Hertzog Maud Yarmola Elena G Didry Dominique Bubb Michael R Carlier Marie-France |
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Affiliation: | Dynamique du Cytosquelette, Laboratoire d'Enzymologie et Biochimie Structurales, CNRS, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France. |
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Abstract: | Actobindin is an actin-binding protein from amoeba, which consists of two beta-thymosin repeats and has been shown to inhibit actin polymerization by sequestering G-actin and by stabilizing actin dimers. Here we show that actobindin has the same biochemical properties as the Drosophila or Caenorhabditis elegans homologous protein that consists of three beta-thymosin repeats. These proteins define a new family of actin-binding proteins. They bind G-actin in a 1:1 complex with thermodynamic and kinetic parameters similar to beta-thymosins. Like beta-thymosins, they slow down nucleotide exchange on G-actin and make a ternary complex with G-actin and Latrunculin A. On the other hand, they behave as functional homologs of profilin because their complex with MgATP-G-actin, unlike beta-thymosin-actin, participates in filament barbed end growth, like profilin-actin complex. Therefore these proteins play an active role in actin-based motility processes. In addition, proteins of the actobindin family interact with the pointed end of actin filaments and inhibit pointed end growth, maybe via the interaction of the beta-thymosin repeats with two terminal subunits. |
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