4.0 Article

Activity of cofilin can be regulated by a mechanism other than phosphorylation/dephosphorylation in muscle cells in culture

Journal

JOURNAL OF MUSCLE RESEARCH AND CELL MOTILITY
Volume 28, Issue 2-3, Pages 183-194

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10974-007-9117-6

Keywords

cofilin; actin; phosphoinositide; muscle cell

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Cofilin plays a critical role in actin filament dynamics in a variety of eukaryotic cells. Its activity is regulated by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of a Ser3 residue on the N-terminal side and/or its binding to a phosphoinositide, PIP2. To clarify how cofilin activity is regulated in muscle cells, we generated analogues of the unphosphorylated form (A3-cofilin) and phosphorylated form (D3-cofilin) by converting the phosphorylation site (Ser3) of cofilin to Ala and Asp, respectively. These mutated proteins, as well as the cofilin having Ser3 residue (S3-cofilin), were produced in an E. coli expression system and conjugated with fluorescent dyes. In an in vitro functional assay, A3-cofilin retained the ability to bind to F-actin. Upon injection into cultured muscle cells, A3-cofilin and S3-cofilin promptly disrupted actin filaments in the cytoplasm, and many cytoplasmic rods containing both the exogenous cofilin and actin were generated, while D3-cofilin was simply diffused in the cytoplasm without affecting actin filaments. Several hours after the injection, however, the activity of A3-cofilin and S3-cofilin was suppressed: the actin-A3-cofilin (or S3-cofilin) rods disappeared, the cofilin diffused in the cytoplasm like D3-cofilin, and actin filaments reformed. Both GFP-fused A3-cofilin and S3-cofilin that were produced by cDNA transfection were also suppressed in the cytoplasm of muscle cells in culture. Thus, some mechanism(s) other than phosphorylation can suppress A3-cofilin activity. We observed that PIP2 can bind to A3-cofilin just as to S3-cofilin and inhibits the interaction of A3-cofilin with actin. Our results suggest that the activity of A3-cofilin and also S3-cofilin can be regulated by PIP2 in the cytoplasm of muscle cells.

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