4.3 Article

The effect of ADF/cofilin and profilin on the dynamics of monomeric actin

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-PROTEINS AND PROTEOMICS
Volume 1834, Issue 10, Pages 2010-2019

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2013.06.006

Keywords

Actin; Cofilin; Profilin; Conformational dynamics; Fluorescence; Calorimetry

Funding

  1. Hungarian Science Foundation (OTKA) [K77840, NN107776]
  2. Hungarian National Office for Research and Technology (GVOP) [GVOP-3.2.1.-2004-04-0190/3.0, GVOP-3.2.1.-2004-04-0228/3.0]
  3. Science, Please! Research Team on Innovation [SROP-4.2.2/08/1/2008-0011]
  4. University of Pecs, Medical School (KA) [2011/34039/otka2011-8]

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The main goal of the work was to uncover the dynamical changes in actin induced by the binding of cofilin and profilin. The change in the structure and flexibility of the small domain and its function in the thermodynamic stability of the actin monomer were examined with fluorescence spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The structure around the C-terminus of actin is slightly affected by the presence of cofilin and profilin. Temperature dependent fluorescence resonance energy transfer measurements indicated that both actin binding proteins decreased the flexibility of the protein matrix between the subdomains 1 and 2. Time resolved anisotropy decay measurements supported the idea that cofilin and profilin changed similarly the dynamics around the fluorescently labeled Cys-374 and Lys-61 residues in subdomains 1 and 2, respectively. DSC experiments indicated that the thermodynamic stability of actin increased by cofilin and decreased in the presence of profilin. Based on the information obtained it is possible to conclude that while the small domain of actin acts uniformly in the presence of cofilin and profilin the overall stability of actin changes differently in the presence of the studied actin binding proteins. The results support the idea that the small domain of actin behaves as a rigid unit during the opening and closing of the nucleotide binding pocket in the presence of profilin and cofilin as well. The structural arrangement of the nucleotide binding cleft mainly influences the global stability of actin while the dynamics of the different segments can change autonomously. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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