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1.
The Ca2+-activated actin-binding protein gelsolin regulates actin filament length by severing preformed filaments and by binding actin monomers, stabilizing nuclei for their assembly into filaments. Gelsolin binds to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2), with consequent inhibition of its filament severing activity and dissociation of EGTA-resistant complexes made with rabbit macrophage or human plasma gelsolin and rabbit muscle actin. This study provides evidence for an interaction of gelsolin with phosphatidylinositol monophosphate (PIP) as well as PIP2 and further describes their effects on gelsolin's function. Both phosphoinositides completely dissociate EGTA-insensitive rabbit macrophage cytoplasmic gelsolin-actin complexes and inhibit gelsolin's severing activity. The magnitude of inhibition depends strongly on the physical state of the phosphoinositides, being maximal in preparations that contain small micelles of either purified PIP or PIP2. Aggregation of PIP or PIP2 micelles by divalent cations or insufficient sonication or their incorporation into vesicles containing other phospholipids decreases but does not eliminate the inhibitory properties of the polyphosphoinositides. The presence of gelsolin partly inhibits the divalent cation-induced aggregation of PIP2 micelles. PIP2 in combination with EGTA inactivates gelsolin molecules that block the fast-growing end of actin filaments, thereby accelerating actin polymerization. Regulation of gelsolin by the intracellular messengers Ca2+ and polyphosphoinositides allows for the formation of several different gelsolin-actin intermediates with distinct functional properties that may be involved in changes in the state of cytoplasmic actin following cell stimulation.  相似文献   

2.
S G Heiss  J A Cooper 《Biochemistry》1991,30(36):8753-8758
Chicken muscle CapZ, a member of the capping protein family of actin-binding proteins, binds to the barbed end of actin filaments and nucleates actin polymerization. No regulation of the capping protein family has been described. We report that micelles of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) bind to CapZ and completely inhibit its ability to affect actin polymerization as measured by several independent assays. Higher concentrations of other anionic phospholipids also completely inhibit the activity of CapZ. Neutral phospholipids have no effect. Mixed vesicles of PIP2 with phosphatidylcholine or phosphatidylethanolamine also inhibit CapZ, but addition of Triton X-100 both prevents and reverses PIP2's inhibition of CapZ.  相似文献   

3.
MAP2 (microtubule-associated protein 2) and tau factor are calmodulin-binding and actin filament-interacting proteins, respectively. We have examined the effect of Ca2+ and calmodulin on MAP-induced actin gelation by the low-shear falling-ball method, the high-speed centrifugation method, and electron microscopy using negative staining. Each MAP crosslinks actin filaments to increase the apparent viscosities and finally to form gels. Calmodulin inhibited MAP2- and tau factor-induced actin gelation (MAP2- and tau factor-actin interaction) only in the presence of Ca2+, but not in its absence. There were no differences in actin filament crosslinking activity of respective MAPs with or without Ca2+. MAP2 was not coprecipitated with F-actin only in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin determined by the high-speed centrifugation method. But MAP2 was found to bind to F-actin under any other conditions examined. In contrast, the tau factor-actin filament interaction could only be detected by the low-shear viscosity, but not by the high-speed centrifugation method. MAP2 and tau factor aggregated to form actin bundles as shown by electron microscopy. MAP2- or tau factor-induced bundle formation of actin filaments was inhibited only in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin, but not in the presence or absence of Ca2+. In conclusion, the interaction of MAP2- and tau factor-actin filaments is regulated by Ca2+ and calmodulin in a flip-flop switch.  相似文献   

4.
Gelsolin is a Ca2+- and polyphosphoinositide-modulated actin-binding protein which severs actin filaments, nucleates actin assembly, and caps the "barbed" end of actin filaments. Proteolytic cleavage analysis of human plasma gelsolin has shown that the NH2-terminal half of the molecule severs actin filaments almost as effectively as native gelsolin in a Ca2+-insensitive but polyphosphoinositide-inhibited manner. Further proteolysis of the NH2-terminal half generates two unique fragments (CT14N and CT28N), which have minimal severing activity. Under physiological salt conditions, CT14N binds monomeric actin coupled to Sepharose but CT28N does not. In this paper, we show that CT28N binds stoichiometrically and with high affinity to actin subunits in filaments, suggesting that it preferentially recognizes the conformation of polymerized actin. Analysis of the binding data shows that actin filaments have one class of CT28N binding sites with Kd = 2.0 X 10(-7) M, which saturates at a CT28N/actin subunit ratio of 0.8. Binding of CT28N to actin filaments is inhibited by phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate micelles. In contrast, neither CT14N nor another actin-binding domain located in the COOH-terminal half of gelsolin form stable stoichiometric complexes with actin along the filaments, and their binding to actin monomers is not inhibited by PIP2. Based on these observations, we propose that CT28N is the polyphosphoinositide-regulated actin-binding domain which allows gelsolin to bind to actin subunits within a filament before serving.  相似文献   

5.
L Eichinger  M Schleicher 《Biochemistry》1992,31(20):4779-4787
Severin is a Ca(2+)-activated actin-binding protein that nucleates actin assembly and severs and caps the fast growing ends of actin filaments. It consists of three highly conserved domains. To investigate the domain structure of severin, we constructed genetically the N-terminal domain 1, the middle domain 2, and the tandem domains 2 + 3. Their interaction with actin, Ca2+, and lipids was characterized. Domain 1 contains the F-actin capping and a Ca(2+)-binding site [Eichinger, L., Noegel, A. A., & Schleicher, M. (1991) J. Cell Biol. 112, 665-676]. Binding of domain 2 to actin filaments was Ca(2+)-dependent and saturated at a 1:1 molar ratio. In the presence of Ca2+, about 1.5 mol of domains 2 + 3 bound per mole of F-actin subunit. Scatchard analysis gave a Kd of 18 microM for the interaction of domain 2 with F-actin subunits and a Kd of 1.6 microM for domains 2 + 3. Low-shear viscometry, electron microscopy, and low-speed sedimentation assays showed that domains 2 + 3 induced bundling of actin filaments. The influence of PIP2 micelles on the different activities of severin was assayed using native severin and N- and C-terminally truncated fragments. Severin contains at least two PIP2-binding sites since the activities of the two nonoverlapping severin fragments domain 1 and domains 2 + 3 were inhibited by PIP2. The specificity of severin-phospholipid interaction was investigated by studying the regulation of native severin by PIP2 and other pure or mixed phospholipids.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Bursts of actin polymerization in vivo involve the transient appearance of free barbed ends. To determine how rapidly barbed ends might appear and how long they might remain free in vivo, we studied the kinetics of capping protein, the major barbed end capper, binding to barbed ends in vitro. First, the off-rate constant for capping protein leaving a barbed end is slow, predicting a half-life for a capped barbed end of approximately 30 min. This half-life implies that cells cannot wait for capping protein to spontaneously dissociate from capped barbed ends in order to create free barbed ends. However, we find that phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) and phosphatidylinositol 4- mono-phosphate (PIP) cause rapid and efficient dissociation of capping protein from capped filaments. PIP2 is a strong candidate for a second messenger regulating actin polymerization; therefore, the ability of PIP2 to remove capping protein from barbed ends is a potential mechanism for stimulating actin polymerization in vivo. Second, the on- rate constant for capping protein binding to free barbed ends predicts that actin filaments could grow to the length of filaments observed in vivo during one lifetime. Third, capping protein beta-subunit isoforms did not differ in their actin binding properties, even in tests with different actin isoforms. A major hypothesis for why capping protein beta-subunit isoforms exist is thereby excluded. Fourth, the proposed capping protein regulators, Hsc70 and S100, had no effect on capping protein binding to actin in vitro.  相似文献   

7.
Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) reorganizes actin filaments by modulating the functions of a variety of actin-regulatory proteins. Until now, it was thought that bound PIP2 is hydrolyzed only by tyrosine-phosphorylated phospholipase Cgamma (PLCgamma) after the activation of tyrosine kinases. Here, we show a new mechanism for the hydrolysis of bound PIP2 and the regulation of actin filaments by PIP2 phosphatase (synaptojanin). We isolated a 150-kDa protein (p150) from brains that binds the SH3 domains of Ash/Grb2. The sequence of this protein was found to be homologous to that of synaptojanin. The expression of p150 in COS 7 cells produces a decrease in the number of actin stress fibers in the center of the cells and causes the cells to become multinuclear. On the other hand, the expression of a PIP2 phosphatase-negative mutant does not disrupt actin stress fibers or produce the multinuclear phenotype. We have also shown that p150 forms the complexes with Ash/Grb2 and epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptors only when the cells are treated with EGF and that it reorganizes actin filaments in an EGF-dependent manner. Moreover, the PIP2 phosphatase activity of native p150 purified from bovine brains is not inhibited by profilin, cofilin, or alpha-actinin, although PLCdelta1 activity is markedly inhibited by these proteins. Furthermore, p150 suppresses actin gelation, which is induced by smooth muscle alpha-actinin. All these data suggest that p150 (synaptojanin) hydrolyzes PIP2 bound to actin regulatory proteins, resulting in the rearrangement of actin filaments downstream of tyrosine kinase and Ash/Grb2.  相似文献   

8.
The organization and regulation of the macrophage actin skeleton   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
To move, leukocytes extend portions of their cortical cytoplasm as pseudopods. These pseudopods are filled with a three-dimensional actin filament skeleton, the reversible assembly of which in response to receptor stimulation is thought to play a major role in providing the mechanical force for these protrusive movements. The organization of this actin skeleton occurs at different levels within the cell, and a number of macrophage proteins have been isolated and shown to affect the architecture, assembly, stability, and length of actin filaments in vitro. The architecture of cytoplasmic actin is regulated by proteins that cross-link filaments in higher-order structures. Actin-binding protein plays a major role in defining network structure by cross-linking actin filaments into orthogonal networks. Gelsolin may have a central role in regulating network structure. It binds to the sides of actin filaments and severs them, and binds the "barbed" filament end, thereby blocking monomer addition at this end. Gelsolin is activated to bind actin filaments by microM calcium. Dissociation of gelsolin bound on filament ends occurs in the presence of the polyphosphoinositides, PIP and PIP2. Calcium and PIP2 have been shown to be intracellular messengers of cell stimulation.  相似文献   

9.
The polyphosphoinositides phosphatidylinositol 4-monophosphate (PIP) and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) inactivate the actin filament-severing proteins villin and gelsolin and dissociate them from monomeric and polymeric actin. A potential polyphosphoinositide- (PPI) binding site of human plasma gelsolin regulating filament severing has been localized to the region between residues 150-169 and to the corresponding region in villin which occurs in the second of six homologous domains present in both proteins. Synthetic peptides based on these sequences bind tightly to both PIP and PIP2, in either micelles or bilayer vesicles, compete with gelsolin for binding to PPIs, and dissociate gelsolin-PIP2 complexes, restoring severing activity to the protein. These peptides also bind with moderate affinity to F-actin, suggesting that inactivation of the severing function of the intact proteins by PPIs results from competition between actin and PPIs for a critical binding site on gelsolin-villin. The PPI-binding peptides contain numerous basic amino acids, but their effects on PPIs are far greater than those of Arg or Lys oligomers, a highly basic peptide derived from the calmodulin-binding site of myristoylated, alanine-rich kinase C substrate protein, or the 5-kDa actin-binding protein thymosin beta-4, suggesting that specific aspects of the primary and secondary structure of these basic peptides are important for their interaction with the acidic headgroups of PPIs. In addition to elucidating the structure of PIP2-binding sites in gelsolin, the results describe a sensitive assay for phosphoinositide-binding molecules based on their ability to prevent inhibition of gelsolin function.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of binding the Trp-free motor domain mutant of Dictyostelium discoideum, rabbit skeletal muscle myosin S1, and tropomyosin on the dynamics and conformation of actin filaments was characterized by an analysis of steady-state tryptophan phosphorescence spectra and phosphorescence decay kinetics over a temperature range of 140-293 K. The binding of the Trp-free motor domain mutant of D. discoideum to actin caused red shifts in the phosphorescence spectrum of two internal Trp residues of actin and affected the intrinsic lifetime of each emitter, decreasing by roughly twofold the short phosphorescence lifetime components (tau(1) and tau(2)) and increasing by approximately 20% the longest component (tau(3)). The alteration of actin phosphorescence by the motor protein suggests that i), structural changes occur deep down in the core of actin and that ii), subtle changes in conformation appear also on the surface but in regions distant from the motor domain binding site. When actin formed complexes with skeletal S1, an extra phosphorescence lifetime component appeared (tau(4), twice as long as tau(3)) in the phosphorescence decay that is absent in the isolated proteins. The lack of this extra component in the analogous actin-Trp-free motor domain mutant of D. discoideum complex suggests that it should be assigned to Trps in S1 that in the complex attain a more compact local structure. Our data indicated that the binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments had no effect on the structure or flexibility of actin observable by this technique.  相似文献   

11.
The actin filament network immediately under the plasma membrane at the leading edge of rapidly moving cells consists of short, branched filaments, while those deeper in the cortex are much longer and are rarely branched. Nucleation by the Arp2/3 complex activated by membrane-bound factors (Rho-family GTPases and PIP(2)) is postulated to account for the formation of the branched network. Tropomyosin (TM) binds along the sides of filaments and protects them from severing proteins and pointed-end depolymerization in vitro. Here, we show that TM inhibits actin filament branching and nucleation by the Arp2/3 complex activated by WASp-WA. Tropomyosin increases the lag at the outset of polymerization, reduces the concentration of ends by 75%, and reduces the number of branches by approximately 50%. We conclude that TM bound to actin filaments inhibits their ability to act as secondary activators of nucleation by the Arp2/3 complex. This is the first example of inhibition of branching by an actin binding protein. We suggest that TM suppresses the nucleation of actin filament branches from actin filaments in the deep cortex of motile cells. Other abundant actin binding proteins may also locally regulate the branching nucleation by the Arp2/3 complex in cells.  相似文献   

12.
It has been demonstrated that microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) interact with tubulin in vitro and in vivo. However, there is no clear evidence on the possible roles of the interactions of MAPs in vivo with other cytoskeletal components in maintaining the integrity of the cell architecture. To address this question we extracted the neuronal cytoskeleton from brain cells and studied the selective dissociation of specific molecular isospecies of tau protein under various experimental conditions. Tau, and in some cases MPA-2, were analysed by the use of anti-idiotypic antibodies that recognize epitopes on their tubulin binding sites. Fractions of microtubule-bound tau isoforms were extracted with 0.35 M NaCl or after the addition of nocodazole to allow microtubule depolymerization. Protein eluted with this inhibitor contained most of the assembled tubulin dimer pool and part of the remaining tau and MAP-2. When the remaining cytoskeletal pellet was treated with cytochalasin D to allow depolymerization of actin filaments, only tau isoforms were extracted. Immunoprecipitation studies along with immunolocalization experiments in cell lines containing tau-like components supported the findings on the roles of tau isospecies as linkers between tubulin in the microtubular structure with actin filaments. Interestingly, in certain types of cells, antibody-reactive tau isospecies were detected by immunofluorescence with a discrete distribution pattern along actin filaments, which was affected by cytochalasin disruption of the actin filament network. These results suggest the possible in vivo roles of subsets of tau protein in modulating the interactions between microtubules and actin filaments.  相似文献   

13.
The intracellular polymerization of cytoskeletal proteins into their supramolecular assemblies raises many questions regarding the regulatory patterns that control this process. Binding experiments using the ELISA solid phase system, together with protein assembly assays and electron microscopical studies provided clues on the protein-protein associations in the polymerization of tubulin and actin networks. In vitro reconstitution experiments of these cytoskeletal filaments using purified tau, tubulin, and actin proteins were carried out. Tau protein association with tubulin immobilized in a solid phase support system was inhibited by actin monomer, and a higher inhibition was attained in the presence of preassembled actin filaments. Conversely, tubulin and assembled microtubules strongly inhibited tau interaction with actin in the solid phase system. Actin filaments decreased the extent of in vitro tau-induced tubulin assembly. Studies on the morphological aspects of microtubules and actin filaments coexisting in vitro, revealed the association between both cytoskeletal filaments, and in some cases, the presence of fine filamentous structures bridging these polymers. Immunogold studies showed the association of tau along polymerized microtubules and actin filaments, even though a preferential localization of labeled tau with microtubules was revealed. The studies provide further evidence for the involvement of tau protein in modulating the interactions of microtubules and actin polymers in the organization of the cytsokeletal network.  相似文献   

14.
H Miki  K Miura    T Takenawa 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(19):5326-5335
Here we identify a 65 kDa protein (N-WASP) from brain that binds the SH3 domains of Ash/Grb2. The sequence is homologous to Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP). N-WASP has several functional motifs, such as a pleckstrin homology (PH) domain and cofilin-homologous region, through which N-WASP depolymerizes actin filaments. When overexpressed in COS 7 cells, the wild-type N-WASP causes several surface protrusions where N-WASP co-localizes with actin filaments. Epidermal growth factor (EGF) treatment induces the complex formation of EGF receptors and N-WASP, and produces microspikes. On the other hand, two mutants, C38W (a point mutation in the PH domain) and deltaVCA (deletion of the actin binding domain), localize predominantly in the nucleus and do not cause a change in the cytoskeleton, irrespective of EGF treatment. Interestingly, the C38W PH domain binds less effectively to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) than the wild-type PH domain. These results suggest the importance of the PIP2 binding ability of the PH domain and the actin binding for retention in membranes. Collectively, we conclude that N-WASP transmits signals from tyrosine kinases to cause a polarized rearrangement of cortical actin filaments dependent on PIP2.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: MAP2 and tau are abundant microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) in neurons. The development of neuronal dendrites and axons requires a dynamic interaction between microtubules and actin filaments. MAPs represent good candidates to mediate such interactions. Although MAP2c and tau have similar, well-characterized microtubule binding activities, their actin interaction is poorly understood. RESULTS: Here, we show by using a cosedimentation assay that MAP2c binds F-actin. Upon actin binding, MAP2c organizes F-actin into closely packed actin bundles. Moreover, we show by using a deletion approach that MAP2c's microtubule binding domain (MTBD) is both necessary and sufficient for both F-actin binding and bundling activities. Surprisingly, even though the MAP2 and tau MTBDs share high sequence homology and possess similar microtubule binding activities, tau is unable to bind or bundle F-actin. Furthermore, experiments with chimeric proteins demonstrate that the actin binding activity fully correlates with the ability to promote neurite initiation in neuroblastoma cells. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide the first demonstration that the MAP2c and tau MTBD domains exhibit distinct properties, diverging in actin binding and neurite initiation activities. These results implicate a novel actin function for MAP2c in neuronal morphogenesis and furthermore suggest that actin interactions could contribute to functional differences between MAP2 and tau in neurons.  相似文献   

16.
Radixin is a member of the ezrin/radixin/moesin (ERM) family of proteins, which play a role in the formation of the membrane-associated cytoskeleton by linking actin filaments and adhesion proteins. This cross-linking activity is regulated by phosphoinositides such as phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) in the downstream of the small G protein Rho. The X-ray crystal structures of the radixin FERM domain, which is responsible for membrane binding, and its complex with inositol-(1,4, 5)-trisphosphate (IP3) have been determined. The domain consists of three subdomains featuring a ubiquitin-like fold, a four-helix bundle and a phosphotyrosine-binding-like domain, respectively. These subdomains are organized by intimate interdomain interactions to form characteristic grooves and clefts. One such groove is negatively charged and so is thought to interact with basic juxta-membrane regions of adhesion proteins. IP3 binds a basic cleft that is distinct from those of pleckstrin homology domains and is located on a positively charged flat molecular surface, suggesting an electrostatic mechanism of plasma membrane targeting. Based on the structural changes associated with IP3 binding, a possible unmasking mechanism of ERM proteins by PIP2 is proposed.  相似文献   

17.
Actin modulating proteins that bind polyphosphoinositides, such as phosphatidylinositol 4, 5-bisphosphate (PIP2), can potentially participate in receptor signaling by restructuring the membrane cytoskeleton and modulating second messenger generation through the phosphoinositide cycle. We examined these possibilities by overexpressing CapG, an actin filament end capping, Ca(2+)- and polyphosphoinositide-binding protein of the gelsolin family. High level transient overexpression decreased actin filament staining in the center of the cells but not in the cell periphery. Moderate overexpression in clonally selected cell lines did not have a detectible effect on actin filament content or organization. Nevertheless, it promoted a dose-dependent increase in rates of wound healing and chemotaxis. The motile phenotype was similar to that observed with gelsolin overexpression, which in addition to capping, also severs and nucleates actin filaments. CapG overexpressing clones are more responsive to platelet-derived growth factor than control- transfected clones. They form more circular dorsal membrane ruffles, have higher phosphoinositide turnover, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate generation and Ca2+ signaling. These responses are consistent with enhanced PLC gamma activity. Direct measurements of PIP2 mass showed that the CapG effect on PLC gamma was not due primarily to an increase in the PIP2 substrate concentration. The observed changes in cell motility and membrane signaling are consistent with the hypothesis that PIP(2)-binding actin regulatory proteins modulate phosphoinositide turnover and second messenger generation in vivo. We infer that CapG and related proteins are poised to coordinate membrane signaling with actin filament dynamics following cell stimulation.  相似文献   

18.
Tan Z  Boss WF 《Plant physiology》1992,100(4):2116-2120
Phosphatidylinositol kinase (PI), phosphatidylinositol monophosphate (PIP) kinase, and diacylglycerol (DAG) kinase activities were detected in the cytoskeletal fraction isolated from microsomes and plasma membranes of carrot (Daucus carota L.) cells grown in suspension culture. The lipid kinase activities were associated with the actin filament fraction (F-actin fraction) isolated from the cytoskeleton. The PI and PIP kinase activity in the F-actin fraction significantly increased after cells were treated with Driselase, a mixture of cell wall-degrading enzymes; however, the DAG kinase activity in the F-actin fraction was unaffected by the Driselase treatment. These data indicate that at least one form of PI, PIP, and DAG kinase preferentially associates with actin filaments and/or actin binding proteins and that cytoskeletal-associated PI and PIP kinase activities can change in response to external stimulation.  相似文献   

19.
The bacteriophage T4 uvsX gene codes for a DNA-binding protein that is important for genetic recombination in T4-infected cells. This protein is a DNA-dependent ATPase that resembles the Escherichia coli recA protein in many of its properties. We have examined the binding of purified uvsX protein to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and to double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) using electron microscopy to visualize the complexes that are formed and double label analysis to measure their protein content. We find that the uvsX protein binds cooperatively to dsDNA, forming filaments 14 nm in diameter with an apparently helical axial repeat of 12 nm. Each repeat contains about 42 base pairs and 9-12 uvsX protein monomers. In solutions containing Mg2+, the uvsX protein also binds cooperatively to ssDNA. The filaments that result are 14 nm in diameter, show a 12-nm axial repeat, and they are nearly identical in appearance to the filaments that contain dsDNA. In the filaments formed along ssDNA, each axial repeat contains about 49 DNA bases and 9-12 uvsX monomers. Both the filaments formed on the ssDNA and dsDNA show a strong tendency to align side-by-side. T4 gene 32 protein also binds cooperatively to ssDNA and interacts both physically and functionally with uvsX protein. However, when gene 32 and uvsX proteins were added to ssDNA together, no interaction between the two proteins was detected.  相似文献   

20.
The polyelectrolyte behavior of actin filaments: a 25Mg NMR study.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
W Xian  J X Tang  P A Janmey  W H Braunlin 《Biochemistry》1999,38(22):7219-7226
Under physiological conditions, filamentous actin (F-actin) is a polyanionic protein filament. Key features of the behavior of F-actin are shared with other well-characterized polyelectrolytes, in particular, duplex DNA. For example, the bundle formation of F-actin by polyvalent cations, including divalent metal ions such as Mg2+, has been proposed to be a natural consequence of the polyelectrolyte nature of actin filaments [Tang and Janmey (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 8556-8563]. This recently proposed model also suggests that weak interactions between F-actin and Mg2+ ions reflect a nonspecific trapping of counterions in the electric field surrounding F-actin due to its polyelectrolyte nature. To test this hypothesis, we have performed 25Mg NMR measurements in F-actin solutions. Based on the NMR data, we estimate that the rotational correlation times of Mg2+ are independent of the overall rotational dynamics of the actin filaments. Moreover, competitive binding experiments demonstrate a facile displacement of F-actin-bound Mg2+ by Co(NH3)63+. At higher Co(NH3)63+ concentrations, a fraction of the magnesium ions are trapped as actin filaments aggregate. ATP also competes effectively with actin filaments for binding to Mg2+. These results support the hypothesis that magnesium ions bind loosely and nonspecifically to actin filaments, and thus show a behavior typical of counterions in polyelectrolyte solutions. The observed features mimic to some extent the well-documented behavior of counterions in DNA solutions.  相似文献   

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