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Effects of Nucleotide and End-Dependent Actin Conformations on Polymerization
Authors:Lauren Jepsen  David Sept
Institution:1.Department of Biomedical Engineering and Center for Computational Medicine and Bioinformatics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Abstract:The regulation of actin is key for controlled cellular function. Filaments are regulated by actin-binding proteins, but the nucleotide state of actin is also an important factor. From extended molecular dynamics simulations, we find that both nucleotide states of the actin monomer have significantly less twist than their crystal structures and that the ATP monomer is flatter than the ADP form. We also find that the filament’s pointed end is flatter than the remainder of the filament and has a conformation distinct from G-actin, meaning that incoming monomers would need to undergo isomerization that would weaken the affinity and slow polymerization. Conversely, the barbed end of the filament takes on a conformation nearly identical to the ATP monomer, enhancing ATP G-actin’s ability to polymerize as compared with ADP G-actin. The thermodynamic penalty imposed by differences in isomerization for the ATP and ADP growth at the barbed end exactly matches experimental results.
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