| Literature DB >> 18378777 |
Léa Trichet1, Cécile Sykes, Julie Plastino.
Abstract
At cell-cell contacts, as well as at the leading edge of motile cells, the plasticity of actin structures is maintained, in part, through labile connections to the plasma membrane. Here we explain how and why Drosophila enabled/vasodilator stimulated phosphoprotein (Ena/VASP) proteins are candidates for driving this cytoskeleton modulation under the membrane.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18378777 PMCID: PMC2287277 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200710168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
What is Ena/VASP doing anyway?
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| VASP targeted to leading edge = lamellipodia protrusion speed increases ( | |||
| Results confirmed by CALI | ||||
| FAT1 knockdown to reduce VASP at leading edge = kymograph leading edge smoother ( | ||||
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| Beads ( | ||||
| Soft beads ( | ||||
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| In solution: fluorescence microscopy, phalloidin-stabilized ( | |||
| In cells, electron microscopy of the leading edge ( | ||||
| Comets on beads, Arp2/3 to actin ratio ( | ||||
| Comets on beads, electron microscopy ( | ||||
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| By pyrene assay | By pyrene assay | ||
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| On beads coated with the ActA domain that binds VASP ( | |||
| On mitochondria that target Ena/VASP proteins via the poly-proline repeats of ActA ( | In conjunction with zyxin, observed by targeting zyxin to mitochondria in cells ( | |||
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| By pyrene assay | By pyrene assay | ||
| By pyrene assay | ||||
| By pyrene assay | By pyrene assay | |||
| By measuring actin incorporation into comet tails on moving beads ( | ||||
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| By pyrene assay | By pyrene assay | ||
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| By pyrene assay | |||
| Lack of capture of capped barbed ends by beads coated with VASP ( | ||||
Chromophore-assisted laser inactivation.
The pyrene assay is a method of monitoring the change in the amount of F-actin in a solution by following the fluorescence of pyrenyl-actin, which increases when pyrenyl-actin molecules are incorporated into the filament.
In a similar study, Samarin et al. (2003) observed capture of capped barbed ends by beads coated with VASP. However, these authors concluded that this activity was due to VASP's F-actin binding activity and not to uncapping activity.
Figure 1.Slow-and-go movement in the presence of VASP reflects cycles of near-complete separation of the actin comet from the surface. On the left, an oil droplet just before a jump (top), during a jump (middle), and after a jump (bottom). Note the relaxation of the elongated shape upon release of contacts with the actin comet, which then appears as a rind of bright actin left behind. Actin is fluorescently labeled. Bar, 5 μm. On the right, in graphic form, the variation of the elongation of the droplet in relation to the velocity curve. Note that just before the velocity jump the elongation factor plummets, indicating that the breakage of links occurs first and then the drop jumps forward as retarding connections are released.
Figure 2.Schematic representation of the possible interplay of the Arp2/3 complex and VASP for the remodeling of the branched networks that drive cells together (left) into the belts of parallel filaments that reinforce cell–cell contacts (right). The cartoons at the bottom represent in graphic form the “peeling regimen” that is easy to undo, and the “lifting off regimen” that is hard to separate, representing, respectively, the forming contact and the mature contact reinforced by belts of actin parallel to the membrane. The question mark in the scheme indicates that it is not clear how Ena/VASP proteins are recruited to the membrane: some possibilities include via lamellipodin (Krause et al., 2004), via WASP (Castellano et al., 2001), or via αII-spectrin (Benz et al., 2008).