4.7 Article

Actin filament oxidation by MICAL1 suppresses protections from cofilin-induced disassembly

Journal

EMBO REPORTS
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embr.202050965

Keywords

actin dynamics; actin‐ binding proteins; ADF; cofilin; microfluidics

Funding

  1. CNRS, Institut Pasteur
  2. ANR
  3. ERC [StG-679116]

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MICAL1-mediated oxidation of actin filaments amplifies cofilin severing action, bypassing the need for cofilin activation. Direct post-translational oxidation modification of actin filaments in cells triggers their disassembly.
Proteins of the ADF/cofilin family play a central role in the disassembly of actin filaments, and their activity must be tightly regulated in cells. Recently, the oxidation of actin filaments by the enzyme MICAL1 was found to amplify the severing action of cofilin through unclear mechanisms. Using single filament experiments in vitro, we found that actin filament oxidation by MICAL1 increases, by several orders of magnitude, both cofilin binding and severing rates, explaining the dramatic synergy between oxidation and cofilin for filament disassembly. Remarkably, we found that actin oxidation bypasses the need for cofilin activation by dephosphorylation. Indeed, non-activated, phosphomimetic S3D-cofilin binds and severs oxidized actin filaments rapidly, in conditions where non-oxidized filaments are unaffected. Finally, tropomyosin Tpm1.8 loses its ability to protect filaments from cofilin severing activity when actin is oxidized by MICAL1. Together, our results show that MICAL1-induced oxidation of actin filaments suppresses their physiological protection from the action of cofilin. We propose that, in cells, direct post-translational modification of actin filaments by oxidation is a way to trigger their disassembly.

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