4.8 Article

Cofilactin filaments regulate filopodial structure and dynamics in neuronal growth cones

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-30116-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Penn State College of Medicine (Hershey, PA) campus [SCR_021178]
  2. Penn State College of Medicine Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
  3. Penn State University Park (State College, PA) campus

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In this study, the authors demonstrate that filopodial actin filaments switch between bundles of fascin-crosslinked actin and cofilin-decorated filaments. The authors also observe that cofilactin is associated with various dynamic events within filopodia. Furthermore, the hyper-twisting of actin due to cofilin binding leads to a rearrangement of filament packing, which excludes fascin from the base of filopodia.
In this manuscript the authors show that Filopodia switch between bundles of fascin-crosslinked actin and cofilin-decorated filaments, which exclude fascin binding due to altered structure and packing, as well as affect filopodial searching dynamics. Cofilin is best known for its ability to sever actin filaments and facilitate cytoskeletal recycling inside of cells, but at higher concentrations in vitro, cofilin stabilizes a more flexible, hyper-twisted state of actin known as cofilactin. While this filament state is well studied, a structural role for cofilactin in dynamic cellular processes has not been observed. With a combination of cryo-electron tomography and fluorescence imaging in neuronal growth cones, we observe that filopodial actin filaments switch between a fascin-linked and a cofilin-decorated state, and that cofilactin is associated with a variety of dynamic events within filopodia. The switch to cofilactin filaments occurs in a graded fashion and correlates with a decline in fascin cross-linking within the filopodia, which is associated with curvature in the bundle. Our tomographic data reveal that the hyper-twisting of actin from cofilin binding leads to a rearrangement of filament packing, which largely excludes fascin from the base of filopodia. Our results provide mechanistic insight into the fundamentals of cytoskeletal remodeling inside of confined cellular spaces, and how the interplay between fascin and cofilin regulates the dynamics of searching filopodia.

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