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Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition

The actin capping protein (CP) tightly binds to the barbed end of actin filaments, thus playing a key role in actin-based lamellipodial dynamics. V-1 and CARMIL proteins directly bind to CP and inhibit the filament capping activity of CP. V-1 completely inhibits CP from interacting with the barbed e...

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Autores principales: Takeda, Shuichi, Minakata, Shiho, Koike, Ryotaro, Kawahata, Ichiro, Narita, Akihiro, Kitazawa, Masashi, Ota, Motonori, Yamakuni, Tohru, Maéda, Yuichiro, Nitanai, Yasushi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2897767/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20625546
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000416
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author Takeda, Shuichi
Minakata, Shiho
Koike, Ryotaro
Kawahata, Ichiro
Narita, Akihiro
Kitazawa, Masashi
Ota, Motonori
Yamakuni, Tohru
Maéda, Yuichiro
Nitanai, Yasushi
author_facet Takeda, Shuichi
Minakata, Shiho
Koike, Ryotaro
Kawahata, Ichiro
Narita, Akihiro
Kitazawa, Masashi
Ota, Motonori
Yamakuni, Tohru
Maéda, Yuichiro
Nitanai, Yasushi
author_sort Takeda, Shuichi
collection PubMed
description The actin capping protein (CP) tightly binds to the barbed end of actin filaments, thus playing a key role in actin-based lamellipodial dynamics. V-1 and CARMIL proteins directly bind to CP and inhibit the filament capping activity of CP. V-1 completely inhibits CP from interacting with the barbed end, whereas CARMIL proteins act on the barbed end-bound CP and facilitate its dissociation from the filament (called uncapping activity). Previous studies have revealed the striking functional differences between the two regulators. However, the molecular mechanisms describing how these proteins inhibit CP remains poorly understood. Here we present the crystal structures of CP complexed with V-1 and with peptides derived from the CP-binding motif of CARMIL proteins (CARMIL, CD2AP, and CKIP-1). V-1 directly interacts with the primary actin binding surface of CP, the C-terminal region of the α-subunit. Unexpectedly, the structures clearly revealed the conformational flexibility of CP, which can be attributed to a twisting movement between the two domains. CARMIL peptides in an extended conformation interact simultaneously with the two CP domains. In contrast to V-1, the peptides do not directly compete with the barbed end for the binding surface on CP. Biochemical assays revealed that the peptides suppress the interaction between CP and V-1, despite the two inhibitors not competing for the same binding site on CP. Furthermore, a computational analysis using the elastic network model indicates that the interaction of the peptides alters the intrinsic fluctuations of CP. Our results demonstrate that V-1 completely sequesters CP from the barbed end by simple steric hindrance. By contrast, CARMIL proteins allosterically inhibit CP, which appears to be a prerequisite for the uncapping activity. Our data suggest that CARMIL proteins down-regulate CP by affecting its conformational dynamics. This conceptually new mechanism of CP inhibition provides a structural basis for the regulation of the barbed end elongation in cells.
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spelling pubmed-28977672010-07-12 Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition Takeda, Shuichi Minakata, Shiho Koike, Ryotaro Kawahata, Ichiro Narita, Akihiro Kitazawa, Masashi Ota, Motonori Yamakuni, Tohru Maéda, Yuichiro Nitanai, Yasushi PLoS Biol Research Article The actin capping protein (CP) tightly binds to the barbed end of actin filaments, thus playing a key role in actin-based lamellipodial dynamics. V-1 and CARMIL proteins directly bind to CP and inhibit the filament capping activity of CP. V-1 completely inhibits CP from interacting with the barbed end, whereas CARMIL proteins act on the barbed end-bound CP and facilitate its dissociation from the filament (called uncapping activity). Previous studies have revealed the striking functional differences between the two regulators. However, the molecular mechanisms describing how these proteins inhibit CP remains poorly understood. Here we present the crystal structures of CP complexed with V-1 and with peptides derived from the CP-binding motif of CARMIL proteins (CARMIL, CD2AP, and CKIP-1). V-1 directly interacts with the primary actin binding surface of CP, the C-terminal region of the α-subunit. Unexpectedly, the structures clearly revealed the conformational flexibility of CP, which can be attributed to a twisting movement between the two domains. CARMIL peptides in an extended conformation interact simultaneously with the two CP domains. In contrast to V-1, the peptides do not directly compete with the barbed end for the binding surface on CP. Biochemical assays revealed that the peptides suppress the interaction between CP and V-1, despite the two inhibitors not competing for the same binding site on CP. Furthermore, a computational analysis using the elastic network model indicates that the interaction of the peptides alters the intrinsic fluctuations of CP. Our results demonstrate that V-1 completely sequesters CP from the barbed end by simple steric hindrance. By contrast, CARMIL proteins allosterically inhibit CP, which appears to be a prerequisite for the uncapping activity. Our data suggest that CARMIL proteins down-regulate CP by affecting its conformational dynamics. This conceptually new mechanism of CP inhibition provides a structural basis for the regulation of the barbed end elongation in cells. Public Library of Science 2010-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2897767/ /pubmed/20625546 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000416 Text en Takeda et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Takeda, Shuichi
Minakata, Shiho
Koike, Ryotaro
Kawahata, Ichiro
Narita, Akihiro
Kitazawa, Masashi
Ota, Motonori
Yamakuni, Tohru
Maéda, Yuichiro
Nitanai, Yasushi
Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition
title Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition
title_full Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition
title_fullStr Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition
title_full_unstemmed Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition
title_short Two Distinct Mechanisms for Actin Capping Protein Regulation—Steric and Allosteric Inhibition
title_sort two distinct mechanisms for actin capping protein regulation—steric and allosteric inhibition
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2897767/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20625546
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000416
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