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Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block

Although actin monomers polymerize into filaments in the cytoplasm, the form of actin in the nucleus remains elusive. We searched for the form and function of β-actin fused to nuclear localization signal and to enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EN-actin). Our results reveal that EN-actin is eithe...

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Autores principales: Kalendová, Alžběta, Kalasová, Ilona, Yamazaki, Shota, Uličná, Lívia, Harata, Masahiko, Hozák, Pavel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4110419/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25002125
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00418-014-1243-9
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author Kalendová, Alžběta
Kalasová, Ilona
Yamazaki, Shota
Uličná, Lívia
Harata, Masahiko
Hozák, Pavel
author_facet Kalendová, Alžběta
Kalasová, Ilona
Yamazaki, Shota
Uličná, Lívia
Harata, Masahiko
Hozák, Pavel
author_sort Kalendová, Alžběta
collection PubMed
description Although actin monomers polymerize into filaments in the cytoplasm, the form of actin in the nucleus remains elusive. We searched for the form and function of β-actin fused to nuclear localization signal and to enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EN-actin). Our results reveal that EN-actin is either dispersed in the nucleoplasm (homogenous EN-actin) or forms bundled filaments in the nucleus (EN-actin filaments). Formation of such filaments was not connected with increased EN-actin levels. Among numerous actin-binding proteins tested, only cofilin is recruited to the EN-actin filaments. Overexpression of EN-actin causes increase in the nuclear levels of actin-related protein 3 (Arp3). Although Arp3, a member of actin nucleation complex Arp2/3, is responsible for EN-actin filament nucleation and bundling, the way cofilin affects nuclear EN-actin filaments dynamics is not clear. While cells with homogenous EN-actin maintained unaffected mitosis during which EN-actin re-localizes to the plasma membrane, generation of nuclear EN-actin filaments severely decreases cell proliferation and interferes with mitotic progress. The introduction of EN-actin manifests in two mitotic-inborn defects—formation of binucleic cells and generation of micronuclei—suggesting that cells suffer aberrant cytokinesis and/or impaired chromosomal segregation. In interphase, nuclear EN-actin filaments passed through chromatin region, but do not co-localize with either chromatin remodeling complexes or RNA polymerases I and II. Surprisingly presence of EN-actin filaments was connected with increase in the overall transcription levels in the S-phase by yet unknown mechanism. Taken together, EN-actin can form filaments in the nucleus which affect important cellular processes such as transcription and mitosis.
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spelling pubmed-41104192014-07-28 Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block Kalendová, Alžběta Kalasová, Ilona Yamazaki, Shota Uličná, Lívia Harata, Masahiko Hozák, Pavel Histochem Cell Biol Original Paper Although actin monomers polymerize into filaments in the cytoplasm, the form of actin in the nucleus remains elusive. We searched for the form and function of β-actin fused to nuclear localization signal and to enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EN-actin). Our results reveal that EN-actin is either dispersed in the nucleoplasm (homogenous EN-actin) or forms bundled filaments in the nucleus (EN-actin filaments). Formation of such filaments was not connected with increased EN-actin levels. Among numerous actin-binding proteins tested, only cofilin is recruited to the EN-actin filaments. Overexpression of EN-actin causes increase in the nuclear levels of actin-related protein 3 (Arp3). Although Arp3, a member of actin nucleation complex Arp2/3, is responsible for EN-actin filament nucleation and bundling, the way cofilin affects nuclear EN-actin filaments dynamics is not clear. While cells with homogenous EN-actin maintained unaffected mitosis during which EN-actin re-localizes to the plasma membrane, generation of nuclear EN-actin filaments severely decreases cell proliferation and interferes with mitotic progress. The introduction of EN-actin manifests in two mitotic-inborn defects—formation of binucleic cells and generation of micronuclei—suggesting that cells suffer aberrant cytokinesis and/or impaired chromosomal segregation. In interphase, nuclear EN-actin filaments passed through chromatin region, but do not co-localize with either chromatin remodeling complexes or RNA polymerases I and II. Surprisingly presence of EN-actin filaments was connected with increase in the overall transcription levels in the S-phase by yet unknown mechanism. Taken together, EN-actin can form filaments in the nucleus which affect important cellular processes such as transcription and mitosis. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2014-07-08 2014 /pmc/articles/PMC4110419/ /pubmed/25002125 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00418-014-1243-9 Text en © The Author(s) 2014 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Kalendová, Alžběta
Kalasová, Ilona
Yamazaki, Shota
Uličná, Lívia
Harata, Masahiko
Hozák, Pavel
Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block
title Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block
title_full Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block
title_fullStr Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block
title_full_unstemmed Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block
title_short Nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block
title_sort nuclear actin filaments recruit cofilin and actin-related protein 3, and their formation is connected with a mitotic block
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4110419/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25002125
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00418-014-1243-9
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