Distinct actin oligomers modulate differently the activity of actin nucleators.
Qu. Zheng Z; Silvan. Unai U; Jockusch. Brigitte M BM; Aebi. Ueli U; Schoenenberger. Cora-Ann CA; Mannherz. Hans Georg HG
Key Findings
- Upper‑dimers and trimers of actin strongly boost filament formation and help release actin from thymosin‑β4 and profilin complexes; lower‑dimers only help at low levels and can block polymerization at higher concentrations.
- The three actin oligomers all bind to major actin‑nucleating proteins, but they modulate each nucleator in opposite ways: upper‑dimers/trimer enhance gelsolin activity, while lower‑dimers enhance Arp2/3 but inhibit gelsolin and formin FH2 domains.
- These results show that the orientation of actin subunits within small oligomers determines whether they stimulate or inhibit different actin‑nucleating pathways.
Practical Outcomes
- For the biohacker community, the study doesn’t provide a usable supplement or protocol. It mainly highlights that actin dynamics are highly nuanced, so any attempts to tweak actin‑related pathways would need far more targeted research before practical application.
Summary
Scientists made tiny clusters of actin proteins and found that each type changes how actin filaments grow, and they interact differently with proteins like gelsolin, formins, Arp2/3, and the peptide thymosin‑β4. The findings are mostly basic cell‑biology and don’t give clear steps you can use in a health‑oriented routine.
Abstract
Polymerization of actin monomers into filaments requires the initial formation of nuclei composed of a few actin subunits; however, their instability has hindered their detailed study. Therefore we used chemically crosslinked actin oligomers to analyse their effect on actin polymerization. Actin dimer (upper dimer, UD), trimer and tetramer intermolecularly crosslinked by phenylene-bismaleimide along the genetic helix (between Lys199 and Cys374) were isolated by gel filtration and found to increasingly stimulate actin polymerization as shown by the pyrene assay and total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy. In contrast, the so-called lower actin dimer (LD) characterized by a Cys374-Cys374 crosslink stimulated actin polymerization only at low but inhibited it at high concentrations. UD and trimer stimulated the repolymerization of actin from complexes with thymosin β4 (Tβ4) or profilin, whereas the LD stimulated repolymerization only from the profilin : actin but not the actin : Tβ4 complex. In vivo, actin polymerization is stimulated by nucleation factors. Therefore the interaction and effects of purified LD, UD and trimer on the actin-nucleating activity of gelsolin, mouse diaphanous related (mDia) formin and the actin-related protein 2/3 (Arp2/3) complex were analysed. Native gel electrophoresis demonstrated binding of LD, UD and trimer to gelsolin and its fragment G1-3, to the FH2 domains of the formins mDia1 and mDia3, and to Arp2/3 complex. UD and trimer increased the nucleating activity of gelsolin and G1-3, but not of the mDia-FH2 domain nor of the Arp2/3 complex. In contrast, LD at equimolar concentration to Arp2/3 complex stimulated its nucleating activity, but inhibited that of mDia-FH2 domains, gelsolin and G1-3, demonstrating differential regulation of their nucleating activity by dimers containing differently oriented actin subunits.
Study Information
pubmed
2015
2015-08-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/febs.13381
13
60