Actin filament assembly by the actin-related protein (Arp) 2/3 complex is necessary to build many cellular structures, including lamellipodia at the leading edge of motile cells and phagocytic cups, and to move endosomes and intracellular pathogens. The crucial role of the Arp2/3 complex in cellular processes requires precise spatiotemporal regulation of its activity. While binding of nucleation-promoting factors (NPFs) has long been considered essential to Arp2/3 complex activity, we recently showed that phosphorylation of the Arp2 subunit is also necessary for Arp2/3 complex activation. Using molecular dynamics simulations and biochemical assays with recombinant Arp2/3 complex, we now show how phosphorylation of Arp2 induces conformational changes permitting activation. The simulations suggest that phosphorylation causes reorientation of Arp2 relative to Arp3 by destabilizing a network of salt-bridge interactions at the interface of the Arp2, Arp3, and ARPC4 subunits. Simulations also suggest a gain-of-function ARPC4 mutant that we show experimentally to have substantial activity in the absence of NPFs. We propose a model in which a network of auto-inhibitory salt-bridge interactions holds the Arp2 subunit in an inactive orientation. These auto-inhibitory interactions are destabilized upon phosphorylation of Arp2, allowing Arp2 to reorient to an activation-competent state.
Actin filament assembly by the actin-related protein (Arp) 2/3 complex is necessary to build many cellular structures, including lamellipodia at the leading edge of motile cells and phagocytic cups, and to move endosomes and intracellular pathogens. The crucial role of the Arp2/3 complex in cellular processes requires precise spatiotemporal regulation of its activity. While binding of nucleation-promoting factors (NPFs) has long been considered essential to Arp2/3 complex activity, we recently showed that phosphorylation of the Arp2 subunit is also necessary for Arp2/3 complex activation. Using molecular dynamics simulations and biochemical assays with recombinant Arp2/3 complex, we now show how phosphorylation of Arp2 induces conformational changes permitting activation. The simulations suggest that phosphorylation causes reorientation of Arp2 relative to Arp3 by destabilizing a network of salt-bridge interactions at the interface of the Arp2, Arp3, and ARPC4 subunits. Simulations also suggest a gain-of-function ARPC4 mutant that we show experimentally to have substantial activity in the absence of NPFs. We propose a model in which a network of auto-inhibitory salt-bridge interactions holds the Arp2 subunit in an inactive orientation. These auto-inhibitory interactions are destabilized upon phosphorylation of Arp2, allowing Arp2 to reorient to an activation-competent state.
Spatial and temporal control of the assembly and disassembly of actin filaments is
crucial for a number of distinct cell processes, including endocytosis and cell
migration [1].
The spontaneous assembly of actin filaments from a pool of actin monomers requires
the formation of an unstable actin trimer nucleus, from which further polymerization
is thermodynamically favorable [2]. Fast filament assembly is achieved by several classes of
proteins that act as actin nucleators, constituting one level of regulation. Formins
and the spire proteins nucleate unbranched filaments [3], [4] and the Arp2/3 complex
facilitates assembly of branched filaments by nucleating a new
“daughter” filament from the side of an existing “mother”
filament [5], [6]. Branched
filament networks generated by the Arp2/3 complex are required to build many
cellular structures, and Arp2/3 complex is the primary nucleator of new actin
filaments in most crawling cells (reviewed in [1], [7], [8]). Aberrant Arp2/3 complex
function has been implicated in a number of disease conditions, most notably cancer
metastasis [7],
[9].Direct regulation of the nucleating activity of the Arp2/3 complex leads to a second
level of control over actin filament assembly. The Arp2/3 complex is composed of
seven subunits: the actin-related proteins Arp2 and Arp3, and ARPC1–5. While
binding of the mother filament contributes significantly to activation [10], full activity
of the Arp2/3 complex also requires ATP binding to Arp2 and Arp3 [11], [12] and binding of
a nucleation promoting factor (NPF), such as WASP [13], [14], N-WASP [15], SCAR/WAVE [16], [17], and the
pathogenic proteins ActA from Listeria monocytogenes
[18] and RickA from
Rickettsia
[19], [20]. NPF binding to
actin monomers facilitates the nucleation reaction, and NPFs couple Arp2/3 complex
activity to that of Rho-family GTPases [21], [22].The structures of the apo and nucleotide-bound states of Arp2/3 were
revealed by X-ray crystallography [23], [24], [25], and these lead to the hypothesis that activation
required large structural changes [25]. The structure of the active Arp2/3 complex at the
junction of the mother filament and the newly nucleated daughter filament (the
branch junction) was recently revealed in reconstructions from electron micrographs
of negatively-stained specimens [26], [27]. In support of the hypothesized structural changes,
docking of the inactive Arp2/3 complex crystal structure into the branch junction
density revealed substantial rearrangements of subunits, particularly of the Arp2
and ARPC3 subunits [27]. For the Arp2/3 complex to incorporate into the daughter
filament and increase filament assembly, Arp3 and Arp2 appear to undergo a large
change in their relative orientation from their arrangement in the inactive crystal
structure to their conformation in the branch junction density, in which they appear
to mimic the short-pitch of an actin dimer [25], [27].An additional, more recently identified requirement for activating nucleation by the
Arp2/3 complex is threonine or tyrosine phosphorylation of the Arp2 subunit [28]. Mass
spectrometry of purified Arp2/3 complex revealed phosphorylation of Arp2 T237 and
T238. Although no phosphorylated tyrosine was identified by mass spectrometry,
mutagenesis studies suggested Arp2 Y202 as the likely phosphorylation site. Mapping
of the Arp2 phosphorylation sites onto the crystal structure reveals that these
residues are near the interface of Arp2, Arp3, and ARPC4, and we predicted that
phosphorylation of these residues could play a role in the large conformational
changes predicted upon activation [28]. Consistent with this prediction, our biochemical assays
suggested that Arp2 phosphorylation primes the complex for activation to allow
conformational changes predicted to be necessary for activation [28]. However, the
mechanism by which phosphorylation permits activation of the Arp2/3 complex remains
poorly understood.Computational studies have the potential to elucidate aspects of Arp2/3 complex
function and regulation. While the impact of computation in this regard has been
limited thus far due to the large system size, molecular dynamics simulations have
been used to examine dynamics of the ATP binding cleft in Arp2 and Arp3 [29], [30]. In
addition, homology modeling of the structures of the Arp2/3 complex from different
species has generated hypotheses about functionally important surfaces [31]. Recently,
steered molecular dynamics simulations were used to investigate potential pathways
of Arp2/3 complex in the absence of phosphorylation [32], and molecular dynamics and
protein-protein docking was used to generate a model of mother filament bound to the
Arp2/3 complex, which was then validated experimentally [33]. Computational methods,
molecular dynamics methods in particular, have also been used previously to study
conformational changes of other proteins upon phosphorylation (reviewed in ref.
[34]).
Examples include the study of structural changes caused by phosphorylation in the
activation and glycine-rich loops of protein kinases [35], [36], [37], [38], changes in peptide
conformations [39], [40], and in membrane proteins such as phospholamban [41].Here, we use unbiased molecular dynamics simulations to determine how phosphorylation
at Arp2 T237 and T238 may change the structure of the Arp2/3 complex and permit
activation by NPFs. We find large conformational changes in the Arp2/3 complex upon
phosphorylation, including the reorientation of Arp2 relative to Arp3, toward the
short-pitch dimer orientation. Our simulations suggest a mechanism by which a
complex network of positively and negatively charged amino acids at the
Arp2/Arp3/ARPC4 interface holds the complex in an inactive configuration, and
phosphorylation disrupts these auto-inhibitory interactions. To test this
prediction, we designed, based on further computational simulations, mutations of
the Arp2/3 complex that we predicted would disrupt the auto-inhibitory interactions.
Biochemical assays reveal that this mutant, R105/106A ARPC4, does in fact show
nucleation activity even in the absence of NPFs.
Results
Phosphorylation of Arp2 at T237/238 or Y202 is required for full Arp2/3
complex nucleation activity
We previously reported that phosphorylation of Arp2 T237/238 or Y202 is necessary
for activation of the Arp2/3 complex in the presence of NPF [28].
Phosphorylation of T237/238 in endogenous Arp2 was confirmed by mass
spectrometry, and heterologous expression of Arp2 with alanine substitutions in
T237/238 and Y202 inhibits membrane protrusion. We tested nucleation activity of
a mutant Arp2/3 with these residues mutated to alanine using recombinant Arp2/3
complex generated in a baculovirus expression system and purified as previously
described [42]. We mutated all three residues because we previously
showed that phosphorylation of these sites acts as a logical ‘or
gate’ with either being necessary for activation [28]. Subunits of the wild
type (WT) and mutant Ala-substituted T237/238-Y202 Arp2 (T237/238A-Y202A) Arp2/3
complex were expressed independently in Spodoptera frugiperdas
(Sf21) insect cells, and were confirmed to assemble the seven-subunit complex
with equimolar stoichiometry (
). We also confirmed that binding to NPF
(N-WASP-VCA) (Kd = 0.5 µM) and actin
filaments (Kd = 1.2–1.3 µM) is
similar for WT and T237/238A-Y202AArp2rArp2/3 complex ().
Figure 1
Phosphorylation site mutant Arp2/3 complex (T237/238A-Y202A Arp2)
nucleates actin filaments less efficiently than recombinant WT.
The rate of assembly of pyrene-labeled actin into filaments, an index of Arp2/3
complex nucleation activity, was similar with WT rArp2/3 (0.193 nM filament
ends) and with Arp2/3 complex purified from bovine thymus (0.209 nM filament
ends at concentrations of 5 nM Arp2/3 complex with 4 µM actin) (
and
). In the presence of NPF (C-terminal VCA domain
of N-WASP), assembly rates increased 19-fold and were 3.30 nM and 2.51 nM
filament ends for recombinant and native Arp2/3 complex respectively
(). We previously showed that native Arp2/3
complex from bovine thymus and WT rArp2/3 purified from insect cells are
phosphorylated, and that native Arp2/3 complex pretreated with the dual
specificity alkaline phosphatase Antarctic phosphatase (AP) is not activated by
NPFs [28].
We confirmed that nucleation by native Arp2/3 and WT rArp2/3 complex in the
presence of NPFs was reduced after treatment with AP to levels similar to
untreated rArp2/3 complex in the absence of NPF (
and ). These data indicate that the activity of WT rArp2/3
in the absence and presence of NPF is similar to that of native Arp2/3 complex
and that dephosphorylation inhibits NPF-induced activity.In the absence of NPF, the rate of actin filament assembly and the concentration
of filament ends with mutant rArp2/3 complex containing T237/238A-Y202AArp2
(t1/2 = 500 s, 0.260 nM) were similar to
native and WT complexes (
and ). In the presence of NPF, although the rate of
filament assembly with the mutant decreased to
t1/2 = 348 s, it was 4-fold slower than the rate
of t1/2 = 84 s with WT rArp2/3 and similar to
that of NPF-stimulated WT rArp2/3 complex pretreated with AP. The concentration
of filament ends for AP-treated Arp2/3 complex and the mutant was similar in
samples with or without NPF (). Pretreating the
mutant with AP completely blocked the increased rate of filament assembly in the
presence of NPF, and rates were similar to WT and mutant in the absence of NPF.
These findings indicate that phosphorylation of T237/238 or Y202 of the Arp2
subunit is necessary for maximal nucleation activity of the Arp2/3 complex.
However, mutant rArp2/3 complex containing T237/238A-Y202AArp2 retains some
residual activity that is abolished by AP.To nucleate a new actin filament, the Arp2/3 complex binds to filament pointed
ends, which reflects its capping activity. We used actin seeds capped at the
barbed end with gelsolin to measure pointed end capping by WT and mutant Arp2rArp2/3 complex. Gelsolin-capped actin filaments elongated from their pointed
ends in the presence of 4 µm actin (
). Addition of WT rArp2/3
complex slowed filament assembly from the pointed end. The rArp2/3 complex
containing mutant Arp2 also slowed filament assembly, although markedly less
than with WT. The measured affinity of the mutant for the pointed end decreased
approximately 8-fold (). These data suggest that
phosphorylation of T237/238 or Y202 in Arp2 is necessary for rArp2/3 complex to
efficiently bind the pointed end of actin filaments.
Computational simulations reveal that phosphorylation induces large
conformational changes in the Arp2/3 complex
We previously hypothesized that phosphorylation may induce a conformational
change that allows activation by mother filament and NPF [28]. To test this hypothesis,
we performed molecular dynamics simulations on phosphorylated and
unphosphorylated wild-type Arp2/3 complex, using the inactive conformation
observed in the crystal structure [25] as a starting point
(
).
We reasoned that, if our hypothesis were correct, the unphosphorylated wild-type
structure should remain relatively unperturbed during the molecular dynamics
simulation, while phosphorylated Arp2/3 should show conformational changes
caused by the strong electrostatic perturbation associated with introducing the
phosphate groups.
Figure 2
Arp2 phosphorylation induces structural changes in simulations of
wild-type Arp2/3 complex.
Due to the large size of the Arp2/3 complex, the simulations required substantial
computational resources on a supercomputer. We performed simulations only with
Arp2 T237 and T238 individually phosphorylated, as well as the unphosphorylated
‘control’ simulation. For each of these systems, we ran duplicate 30
ns molecular dynamics simulations to control for simulation dependence on the
initial conditions and stochastic fluctuations. Observing large conformational
changes using molecular dynamics simulations is difficult because of the gap
between experimental and computationally feasible timescales, and we do not
expect to see the full range of structural change in these simulations.
Nonetheless, large conformational changes were observed for Arp2/3 when
phosphorylated on either T237 or T238 of Arp2. Backbone root mean square
deviations (RMSDs) following global alignment of simulation snapshots to the
starting model revealed modest conformational changes of 3–4 Å RMSD
for the unphosphorylated simulations compared with larger conformational changes
of 4–8 Å for the phosphorylated simulations (
). In general, the
directionality of the conformational changes relative to the unphosphorylated
simulations with pT237 (phosphorylated T237) or pT238 were qualitatively
similar, as were the results in the two duplicate simulations for each system
(). The conclusions we draw are supported by all
of the simulations, although the precise details of the dynamical behaviors
differed. The unphosphorylated simulations show convergence over the last 20 ns
of simulation time. Therefore, the last 20 ns were used in the analyses below.
This convergence with regard to simulation time does not indicate equilibrium
convergence; it is possible and even likely that the full range of structural
changes in the phosphorylated simulation in particular have not been realized
(see Discussion). It should also be noted that these structural changes were not
due to artifactual steric effects of adding phosphate groups to construct the
phosphothreonine side-chains. The phosphate groups were added without causing
any steric clashes with surrounding residues (data not shown). The starting
structure of Arp2 subdomains 1 and 2, which are disordered in all but one
crystal structure, which was stabilized with glutaraldehyde [24], were
homology modeled based on the actin monomer structure (PDB 1ATN [43]).The conformational changes induced by phosphorylation were dominated by changes
in the orientation of Arp2, ARPC1, and ARPC3 relative to other subunits
(). In particular, phosphorylation induced motion
of the Arp2 subunit relative to the Arp3 subunit toward its active position as a
mimic of an actin short-pitch dimer [27], a conformation required
for polymerization of actin (
and ). To quantify this motion, we used the model of active
Arp2/3 obtained by orienting Arp2 and Arp3 as in an actin short-pitch dimer,
with no changes in the structure or orientation of other subunits [B.
Nolen, personal communication]. Specifically, we computed the Cα root
mean square deviation (RMSD) of the Arp2 subunit between individual snapshots
over the last 20 ns and Arp2 in the starting (
) or active orientation
(
)
with respect to Arp3 following alignment of experimentally resolved Cα atoms
of Arp3 subdomains 1 and 2. Phosphorylation of either T237 or T238 caused
conformational changes away from the starting inactive state relative to that
observed in the simulation of unphosphorylated Arp2/3. Phosphorylation also
appears to cause conformational changes that lower the RMSD of the Arp2 subunit
to the active orientation, although further large conformational changes are
required for full activation (
). This may be in part to the relatively
short timescale of the simulations. However, phosphorylation is not expected to
induce a conformational change to the fully active state because our biochemical
determinations (
and [28]) indicate phosphorylation is necessary but not
sufficient for full activation, which also requires binding of the mother
filament and NPFs.
Figure 3
Changes in Arp2-Arp3 orientation upon phosphorylation.
(a) Arp3 and Arp2 subunits from snapshots from the last ns of the
unphosphorylated (Arp3-gray; Arp2-blue) and phosphorylated T237 Arp2
(tan, red) wild-type simulations are shown following alignment of Cα
atoms of subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. These and all other structural
figures were produced using the molecular graphics program UCSF Chimera
[56], except where indicated. The other subunits
of the complex from the snapshot of the unphosphorylated simulation,
colored as in Fig.
2a, were represented as transparent surfaces in order not to
occlude the views of Arp2 and Arp3. (b) RMSD of Arp2 Cα atoms to
their initial positions vs. simulation time following alignment of
subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. (c) RMSD of Arp2 Cα atoms to their
positions in the model of the active short-pitch dimer orientation (B.
Nolen, personal communication) vs. simulation time following alignment
of subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. (d) Distribution of root-mean-square
deviations (RMSD) of Cα atoms of Arp2 from the MD trajectory to Arp2
atoms in the active short-pitch dimer orientation after alignment of
subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3 over the last 20 ns of simulations. (e)
Distribution of number of contacts between Arp3 and Arp2 heavy atoms
over the last 20 ns of simulations. In (b)–(e), coloring is as
follows: U(black)- unphosphorylated; pT237(blue-gray) –
phosphorylated T237 Arp2; pT238(cyan) – phosphorylated T238 Arp2.
RMSD of Arp2 Cα atoms in the initial model to their positions in the
active orientation is 31.2 Å, and the number of Arp3-Arp2 contacts
in the initial model is 35. These values are indicated for reference in
the appropriate plots with a green line.
Changes in Arp2-Arp3 orientation upon phosphorylation.
(a) Arp3 and Arp2 subunits from snapshots from the last ns of the
unphosphorylated (Arp3-gray; Arp2-blue) and phosphorylated T237 Arp2
(tan, red) wild-type simulations are shown following alignment of Cα
atoms of subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. These and all other structural
figures were produced using the molecular graphics program UCSF Chimera
[56], except where indicated. The other subunits
of the complex from the snapshot of the unphosphorylated simulation,
colored as in Fig.
2a, were represented as transparent surfaces in order not to
occlude the views of Arp2 and Arp3. (b) RMSD of Arp2 Cα atoms to
their initial positions vs. simulation time following alignment of
subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. (c) RMSD of Arp2 Cα atoms to their
positions in the model of the active short-pitch dimer orientation (B.
Nolen, personal communication) vs. simulation time following alignment
of subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. (d) Distribution of root-mean-square
deviations (RMSD) of Cα atoms of Arp2 from the MD trajectory to Arp2
atoms in the active short-pitch dimer orientation after alignment of
subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3 over the last 20 ns of simulations. (e)
Distribution of number of contacts between Arp3 and Arp2 heavy atoms
over the last 20 ns of simulations. In (b)–(e), coloring is as
follows: U(black)- unphosphorylated; pT237(blue-gray) –
phosphorylated T237 Arp2; pT238(cyan) – phosphorylated T238Arp2.
RMSD of Arp2 Cα atoms in the initial model to their positions in the
active orientation is 31.2 Å, and the number of Arp3-Arp2 contacts
in the initial model is 35. These values are indicated for reference in
the appropriate plots with a green line.Analyzing the Cα RMSD of each residue of Arp2 after alignment of Arp3
subdomains 1 and 2 reveals that the largest changes in Cα position of Arp2
occur in the C-terminal tail as well as in subdomains 1 and 2, which are
disordered in most unphosphorylated Arp2/3 complex crystal structures
() [23], [24], [25]. Larger structural changes are induced in the
phosphorylated simulations than in the unphosphorylated simulations across the
entirety of Arp2. Substantial increases in the Arp2 per-residue RMSD after
alignment of Arp3 subdomains 1 and 2 compared with those after alignment of the
Arp2 Cα atoms suggest that the motion of Arp2 largely consists of a
rigid-body movement (). Phosphorylation induces
the loss of contacts between Arp2 and Arp3 subunits, potentially allowing the
reorientation of these subunits (
).The results of the molecular dynamics simulations are consistent with the
hypothesis that phosphorylation induces conformational changes that contribute
to adopting a nucleation-competent form [28]. We examined the vicinity
of the phosphorylation sites in detail to identify the interactions mediating
these structural changes. In the unphosphorylated state, T237 and T238 are
located near the interface between Arp2 and ARPC4, and are also close to the
interfaces with Arp3 and ARPC2. The interactions between Arp2 and ARPC4 in the
vicinity of T237/238 are dominated by salt bridges, several of which are
highlighted in
and . In particular, the
complex electrostatic network involves E39, R71, E99, R105, R106, and K107 on
ARPC4; E236 and K232 on Arp2; and R409 and E121 on Arp3. Unphosphorylated T237
and T238 do not participate in the side-chain hydrogen-bonding network.
Figure 4
Interactions in the vicinity of the T237 Arp2 phosphorylation
site.
Stereoimages of the salt-bridge network between Arp2 (pink) and ARPC4
(green) in simulations of wild-type (a) unphosphorylated or (b)
phosphorylated Arp2 T237 Arp2/3 complex.
Interactions in the vicinity of the T237 Arp2 phosphorylation
site.
Stereoimages of the salt-bridge network between Arp2 (pink) and ARPC4
(green) in simulations of wild-type (a) unphosphorylated or (b)
phosphorylated Arp2 T237 Arp2/3 complex.By contrast, these interactions were dramatically rearranged with phosphorylation
of either T237 or T238 (
and ). LeClaire, et al.
hypothesized that R105 and R106 of ARPC4 mediate the effects of phosphorylation
at T237 and T238 of Arp2, respectively [28]. The molecular dynamics
simulations support this hypothesis but also suggest a much more complex
rearrangement of the electrostatic network driven by introduction of the
phosphate charge. The strengths of salt bridge interactions between
phosphorylated amino acids and lysine/arginine side chains are stronger than
those between aspartate/glutamate and lysine/arginine, with phosphate-arginine
interactions being particularly stable [44]. Thus, unsurprisingly, the
phosphorylated amino acids form both transient and stable interactions with
arginine residues in the simulations, such as between pT237 of Arp2 and R105 of
ARPC4 (
)
and between pT238 of Arp2 and R106 of ARPC4 (). The incorporation of pT237 and pT238 into the
electrostatic network necessitates that other salt bridging interactions are
disrupted and a new set of interactions are formed, either as a direct
consequence or as an indirect result of the induced conformational changes
().Because T237 and T238 are near the interfaces with several other subunits,
perturbations to the electrostatic network induced by phosphorylation can cause
large conformational changes. We hypothesized that mutating key residues that
interact with pT237 and pT238 would abolish the ability of phosphorylation to
induce these conformational changes, and hence activation of the nucleation
activity. This hypothesis is based on studies of phosphorylation-mediated
activation in systems such as protein kinases, in which attractive interactions
with arginine residues that interact with phosphorylated residues drive
conformational changes key to phospho-activation [45]. In particular, the
simulations predicted that R105 of ARPC4 would form a specific and stable ion
pair with the phosphate on T237 of Arp2. To test this hypothesis, we constructed
R105AARPC4 mutants with unphosphorylated and phosphorylated T237 in
silico, and generated two independent 30 ns molecular dynamics
simulations for each.Contrary to our expectations, simulations of the unphosphorylated Arp2/3 complex
with the R105AARPC4 mutation produced a similar, but somewhat smaller,
structural change to that induced by phosphorylation at T237 or T238Arp2 (
and
). This result
suggested that the R105AARPC4 mutation could allow partial activation of Arp2/3
even in the absence of phosphorylation. Phosphorylation of T237 Arp2 in the
context of the R105AARPC4 mutant produced even larger structural changes than
phosphorylation of T237 or T238Arp2 alone (
and
). It should again be noted
that the structures at the end of these simulations likely do not represent the
full range of conformational change of these complexes due to the short
timescales available to MD simulation. However, the large conformational changes
away from the inactive, initial state observed at these short timescales are
similar to the conformational changes caused by phosphorylation, suggesting
increased activity of these mutants.
Figure 5
Structural changes induced by R105A ARPC4 mutants in the absence and
presence of phosphorylation.
Stereoimages of changes in Arp2-Arp3 orientation in R105A ARPC4 mutant
Arp2/3 complex from snapshots from the last ns of the unphosphorylated
wild-type(Arp3-gray; Arp2-blue) and the (a) unphosphorylated R105A ARPC4
mutant complex (pink, orange) or (b) phosphorylated T237 Arp2 ARPC4
R105A ARPC4 mutant complex (cyan, magenta) simulations are shown
following alignment of Cα atoms of subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. The
other subunits of the complex from the snapshot of the unphosphorylated
simulation, colored as in Fig. 2a, were represented as transparent surfaces in order
not to occlude the views of Arp2 and Arp3.
Figure 6
R105A ARPC4 mutant complexes alter Arp2-Arp3 orientation and
contacts.
(a) Distribution of root-mean-square deviations (RMSD) of Cα atoms of
Arp2 to Arp2 atoms in the active short-pitch dimer orientation (B.
Nolen, personal communication) after alignment of subdomains 1 and 2 of
Arp3 over the last 20 ns of simulations. (b) Distribution of number of
contacts between Arp3 and Arp2 heavy atoms over the last 20 ns of
simulations. Coloring is as follows: U(black) – unphosphorylated;
R105A(orange) – unphosphorylated R105A ARPC4 mutant; and
pT237/R105A(magenta) – Arp2 T237 phosphorylated R105A ARPC4
mutant. Green line represents the corresponding RMSD (31.2 Å) and
number of contacts (35) for the unphosphorylated starting model as in
Fig. 3.
Structural changes induced by R105A ARPC4 mutants in the absence and
presence of phosphorylation.
Stereoimages of changes in Arp2-Arp3 orientation in R105AARPC4 mutant
Arp2/3 complex from snapshots from the last ns of the unphosphorylated
wild-type(Arp3-gray; Arp2-blue) and the (a) unphosphorylated R105AARPC4
mutant complex (pink, orange) or (b) phosphorylated T237 Arp2ARPC4R105AARPC4 mutant complex (cyan, magenta) simulations are shown
following alignment of Cα atoms of subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. The
other subunits of the complex from the snapshot of the unphosphorylated
simulation, colored as in Fig. 2a, were represented as transparent surfaces in order
not to occlude the views of Arp2 and Arp3.
R105A ARPC4 mutant complexes alter Arp2-Arp3 orientation and
contacts.
(a) Distribution of root-mean-square deviations (RMSD) of Cα atoms of
Arp2 to Arp2 atoms in the active short-pitch dimer orientation (B.
Nolen, personal communication) after alignment of subdomains 1 and 2 of
Arp3 over the last 20 ns of simulations. (b) Distribution of number of
contacts between Arp3 and Arp2 heavy atoms over the last 20 ns of
simulations. Coloring is as follows: U(black) – unphosphorylated;
R105A(orange) – unphosphorylated R105AARPC4 mutant; and
pT237/R105A(magenta) – Arp2 T237 phosphorylated R105AARPC4
mutant. Green line represents the corresponding RMSD (31.2 Å) and
number of contacts (35) for the unphosphorylated starting model as in
Fig. 3.
rArp2/3 complex with R105/106A ARPC4 is active in the absence of an
NPF
To test predictions from our molecular dynamics simulations on the role of
arginines in ARPC4, we generated rArp2/3 complex with R105 and R106 of ARPC4
mutated to alanine (R105/106A ARPC4). While we did not simulate structural
changes associated with the R106AARPC4 mutation, the simulations indicated that
R106 ARPC4 upon T238 phosphorylation played a role analogous to that of R105
ARPC4, forming a stable interaction with the phosphate group (). The mutant R105/106A ARPC4rArp2/3 complex purified
from Sf21 cells showed subunit stoichiometry (
), binding to NPF
(Kd = 0.06 µM), and binding to actin
filaments (Kd = 1.5 µM) () similar to WT. In the absence of NPF, the rate of actin
filament assembly was markedly faster with rArp2/3 complex containing R105/106A
ARPC4 (t1/2 = 173 s) than with WT
(t1/2 = 539 s) (
) and there was 2.5-fold
more filament ends with 4 µM actin and 5 nM Arp2/3 complex (), indicating that the mutant is constitutively more active.
In the presence of NPF, the rate of assembly for the mutant
(t1/2 = 71 s) and WT
(t1/2 = 84 s) was similar, as was the number of
filament ends (), revealing that the
mutation has no effect on maximal NPF-induced Arp2/3 complex activity.
Preincubating the mutant with AP decreased actin nucleation rates but only
slightly (
), and much less than with AP treatment of WT complex. These
data and our molecular dynamics simulations suggest that mutating R105/106
disrupts auto-inhibitory interactions and releases the Arp2/3 complex structure
to a conformation that is permissive for nucleation activity.
Figure 7
R105/106A ARPC4 mutant nucleates actin filaments without nucleation
promoting factors.
(a) Recombinant Arp2/3 complex WT (rWT) and R105/106A ARPC4 expressed and
purified from sf21 cells. (b) Pyrene actin assembly assays comparing
nucleation activity of rWT and R105/106A ARPC4 rArp2/3 complex. (c)
Pointed end capping assay with actin alone (black), rWT (red) and
R105/106A ARPC4 rArp2/3 (green), and R105/106A ARPC4 rArp2/3 pretreated
with Antarctic phosphatase (AP-R105/106A ARPC4) (purple).
R105/106A ARPC4 mutant nucleates actin filaments without nucleation
promoting factors.
(a) Recombinant Arp2/3 complex WT (rWT) and R105/106A ARPC4 expressed and
purified from sf21 cells. (b) Pyreneactin assembly assays comparing
nucleation activity of rWT and R105/106A ARPC4rArp2/3 complex. (c)
Pointed end capping assay with actin alone (black), rWT (red) and
R105/106A ARPC4rArp2/3 (green), and R105/106A ARPC4rArp2/3 pretreated
with Antarctic phosphatase (AP-R105/106A ARPC4) (purple).Pointed end capping by the R105/106A ARPC4rArp2/3 complex appeared similar to WT
rArp2/3. Using gelsolin-capped actin seeds, the rate of pointed end elongation
was not significantly different between mutant and wild-type Arp2/3 complex, and
treating with AP only slightly attenuated capping activity of the mutant (
and
). Hence, the R105/106A ARPC4 mutation likely
causes structural differences similar to those seen in activated WT rArp2/3
complex, and phosphorylation of the R105/106A mutant enhances this effect,
consistent with the simulations of the R105AARPC4 mutant.
Discussion
Significance of conformational changes observed in simulations
Our simulations revealed large structural differences between the phosphorylated
or mutant complexes and the unphosphorylated wild-type complex. These structural
changes included the movement of Arp2 toward the active short-pitch dimer
orientation relative to Arp3. However, the conformational changes observed in
these short molecular dynamics simulations are much smaller than those assumed
to occur upon full activation, and even with longer simulations we would not
expect the phosphorylated complex to adopt the putative active conformation,
since phosphorylation is necessary but not sufficient for activation. Rather, we
propose a model in which phosphorylation destabilizes the inactive state,
leading to conformational changes that relieve the auto-inhibition and thus are
permissive for full activation by NPF binding.It is impossible to say whether the actual structural differences in response to
phosphorylation or mutation are realized at the end of these simulations, but
this is very unlikely. Each of the duplicate simulations of the same state of
the complex show differences, even the dual simulations of the unphosphorylated
state (see, for example, the two peaks in the Arp2 RMSD to the active
orientation (
)), indicating that equilibrium convergence has not been
achieved even for the unphosphorylated, wild-type complex. Consequently, we
believe the structures at the end of these simulations simply suggest that
either phosphorylation or mutation induces large conformational changes that
shift Arp2 towards the active short-pitch dimer orientation – they
are not a prediction of the structure of the Arp2/3 complex
upon phosphorylation or mutation.Besides the changes in the Arp2-Arp3 orientation, large changes in the
orientation of ARPC1 and ARPC3 relative to Arp3 were observed upon
phosphorylation (). We can only speculate
about the mechanism by which phosphorylation effects these changes due to the
long distance of these subunits from the phosphorylation site. Similar to
results from recent steered molecular dynamics simulations [32], the movement of ARPC3
appears to be linked to changes in the bilobal structure of Arp3, and the
movement of ARPC1 appears to be linked to the change in orientation of Arp2.
Unlike their simulations however, we do not observe large changes between ARPC2
and ARPC4 – these changes may appear at larger changes in Arp2 orientation
than are observed in our simulations or on a longer timescale. The lack of large
changes in ARPC2 and APRC4 are consistent however with the fact that mother
filament binding is not increased relative to the unphosphorylated state as
ARPC2 and ARPC4 appear to be the main sites of mother filament binding [33].
Additionally, while some contacts between Arp2 and Arp3 were lost, Arp2 was not
observed to fully dissociate from Arp3 or ARPC4 (data not shown).The findings here and previously [28] indicate that
phosphorylation is required for activation of the Arp2/3 complex. However,
crystal structures of the Arp2/3 complex from preparations found to have
nucleating activity do not show phosphorylation of Arp2. We confirmed that
phosphatase treatment rendered similar preparations to those used in
crystallographic studies inactive (Fig. 1 and [28]). We confirmed that loss of activity was due to
dephosphorylation and not phosphatase binding to the complex or ATP
dephosphorylation of the subunits, and our findings suggest that several
populations of Arp2/3 complex exist in our preparations (data not shown). It is
possible that phosphorylated Arp2/3 complex may not form crystals due to
differences in conformation.
Relief of auto-inhibition by phospho-regulation
In all cases in which phosphorylation is required for functional activation, the
unphosphorylated state can be considered auto-inhibited. A common mechanism for
converting from the auto-inhibited to the activated state is one in which
phosphorylation induces attractive interactions between the phosphorylated
residue and other residues that are required for activating structural changes.
This is seen in Ser/Thr protein kinases, and also in more traditionally
auto-inhibited systems such as the phosphorylation of the tail of Tyr protein
kinases (reviewed in [45]).In contrast, mutation of arginine residues in the Arp2/3 complex enhances
activation by phosphorylation (
and
). This suggests a distinct
mechanism to that discussed above. Structurally, these results suggested that
the effects of phosphorylation are better understood as relieving an
auto-inhibitory interaction through repulsive forces rather than driving
conversion towards the active state via the formation of attractive
interactions. The introduction of phosphate groups with a −2 charge
disrupts the complex electrostatic network at the inter-subunit interfaces near
the threonine phosphorylation sites that hold the complex in an inactive state.
The destabilization of the interaction network driven by the need to accommodate
the electrostatic perturbation leads to conformational changes that are
permissive for full activation by NPF binding. Mutation of ARPC4 R105 and R106
constitutes an electrostatic perturbation that destabilizes the inter-subunit
interfaces akin to phosphorylation. Combining the electrostatic perturbations of
T237 or T238 phosphorylation and mutation of ARPC4 R105/R106 appears to lead to
larger conformational changes (
and
) and higher activity in the
absence of NPF (
). In addition, several other salt-bridge interactions are
broken upon phosphorylation (Fig. S7). Other mutations, particularly of
positively charged amino acids such as K232 Arp2, R409 Arp3, and R200 Arp2 that
show strong interactions in the unphosphorylated states that are then broken
upon phosphorylation, could constitute electrostatic perturbations that would
also magnify the destabilizing effects of phosphorylation. Further studies will
have to determine the extent to which the breakage of these other interactions
can contribute to activation.Based on the activation model laid forth by Dalhaimer and Pollard [32], the
phosphorylation-induced relief-of-autoinhibition may provide a reduced energy
barrier for conversion to the active state upon mother filament and NPF binding,
although there may be thermodynamic effects such as stabilization of the active
complex that our current data do not reveal. In this model, mutation of
R105/R106 ARPC4 in the context of phosphorylation may further reduce the barrier
to forming the fully active complex such that binding to mother filament even in
the absence of NPF can still result in a substantial increase in the activation
kinetics, though our data indicate that NPF binding further accelerates this
process.Due to the large computational expense of the simulations (∼500,000 cpu-hours
during the course of this study), we were unable to perform all of the
potentially informative simulations. For example, we have not investigated
phosphorylation of Y202 on Arp2, which has been proposed as the site of tyrosine
phosphorylation and is located close to T237/238 Arp2. The proximity of Y202 to
the salt-bridge network around T238 leads us to speculate that its
phosphorylation would exert its effects by a similar mechanism, but this
hypothesis remains to be examined. We have also not investigated dual
phosphorylation of both T237 and T238Arp2. Nonetheless, despite these
limitations and the short timescale probed by molecular dynamics, the
simulations suggested a structural mechanism for phosphoregulation of Arp2/3 and
predicted a gain-of-function mutation, which was confirmed experimentally. As
such, this study provides an example of how computational simulations can be
used to create testable models of regulatory phosphorylation, which is valuable
when it is difficult to obtain direct, atomic-resolution structural information,
as is often the case. Here, we have provided a new model for Arp2/3 regulation
in which a network of electrostatic interactions helps to hold the complex in
the inactive state, and this auto-inhibition must be relieved by phosphorylation
to permit activation.
Methods
Generation of mutant subunits
Plasmids encoding Arp2/3 complex subunits were obtained from M. Welch (UC
Berkeley) and were generated as described [42]. Site directed
mutagenesis was performed using a QuikChange Mutagenesis kit (Agilent
Technologies) using the appropriate template. Primers used for T237/238A Arp2
mutation: 5′ primer ()
3′ primer (),
primers for the Y202AArp2 mutation 5′ primer (),
3′ primer ().
Primers used for the R105/106A ARPC4 mutations: 5′ primer
(),
3′ primer ().
Expression and purification of rArp2/3 complex
Recombinant Arp2/3 complex was expressed and purified as described [42]. Briefly,
Sf21 cells at a density 1.0×106 cells/ml were infected with
baculoviruses containing cDNA encoding subunits of the Arp2/3 complex at equal
infection units. Cells were grown in sf900 media in suspension for 48 hours and
then harvested by a 10 min 1000×g centrifugation. Recombinant Arp2/3
complex was affinity purified on Talon resin (Clonetech), and fully assembled
complex was collected after passage over a Superdex 200 FPLC gel filtration
column.
Actin polymerization
Pyreneactin polymerization assays were performed with 4 µM monomeric actin
containing 5% pyrene-labeled actin in KMEI (50 mM KCl, 1 mM
MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA, and 10 mM imidazole, pH 7), 2.5 to 50 nM Arp2/3
complex, and 500 nM N-WASP VCA domain. Measurements were made with an RF-5301PC
spectrophotometer (Shimadzu) at 1 s intervals. Growing filament ends were
calculated by determining the rate of actin assembly at 80% of
polymerization and using the relationship
R = k
where R is the rate of actin assembly,
k is the association rate constant (10
µM−1⋅s−1),
[A] is the concentration of monomeric actin and
[E] is the concentration of growing filament ends as
described previously [17]. The concentration of Arp2/3 complex was varied from
0 to 50 nM and the number of growing filaments calculated for each condition.
Pointed elongation from gelsolin-capped actin filaments was measured as
described previously [6]. Gelsolin-capped actin filaments (100 nM) were used
for pointed end binding assays. F-actin binding assays and in
vitro dephosphorylation of the Arp2/3 complex were performed as
described previously [28].
Quantification of Arp2/3 complex NPF and Actin binding constants
Binding constants of Arp2/3 complex for NPFs were determined by using GST-NWASP
VCA covalently coupled to Activated CH-sepharose 4B (GE Healthcare, Piscataway,
NJ). GST-NPF-coupled beads were added to mock-treated or Antarctic
phosphatase-treated Arp2/3 complex and incubated at room temperature for 30 min.
NPF-coupled beads were spun at 700× g for 5 min, the supernatant removed
and beads resuspended in SDS-PAGE sample buffer. Coomasie-stained gels were
scanned and quantified using a LabWorks imaging system and LabWorks Software
(UVI, CA). The data were plotted and fitted using GraphPad Prism software
(GraphPad Software, Inc., San Diego, CA). Binding constants for Arp2/3 complex
for actin filaments were determined by actin co-sedimentation as described [46].
Molecular dynamics simulations
Systems were prepared for molecular dynamics simulations starting from the
crystal structure of the apo bovineArp2/3 complex (PDB 1K8K
[25]). A
complete model of the unphosphorylated, wild-type bovineArp2/3 complex was
generated using the Protein Local Optimization Program (PLOP) [47], [48], [49] by
building in all atoms missing in the electron density (except Arp2 subdomains 1
and 2). Subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp2 were modeled in based on homology to the
actin monomer structure (PDB 1ATN [43]). The 15-residue
unstructured extension at the end of ARPC2 was energy minimized, as were
residues 39–51 of Arp3, residues 288–297 and 309–319 of ARPC1,
and 41–43 and 65–67 of the Arp2 model. All phosphorylated and mutant
models were generated from the unphosphorylated model by removing all side chain
atoms from the unmodified residue and optimizing the positions of the side-chain
atoms of the modified residue. These models were then solvated in TIP3P water
[50]
and monovalent counterions were added to neutralize the system using Maestro
(Schrodinger LLC).The full system was then energy minimized using DESMOND [51] (D.E. Shaw Research) in
five stages with the following atoms restrained to their positions in the
starting model: 1) all heavy atoms; 2) all backbone (N-C〈-C-O) heavy atoms
and experimentally determined side-chain heavy atoms; 3) all experimentally
determined heavy atoms; 4) all experimentally determined backbone atoms; 5) no
restraints. Minimizations were performed with at least 100 steps of Steepest
Descent minimization followed by L-BFGS optimization after reaching a gradient
of 10.0 kcal·mol−1·Å−1 up
to a total of 10,000 steps or a gradient of 0.1
kcal·mol−1·Å−1. After
full energy minimization of the system, an equilibration was performed. First,
the systems were annealed to a temperature of 300 K using Langevin dynamics at
constant temperature and volume over 50 ps with all heavy atoms restrained.
Subsequently, Langevin dynamics at constant temperature and pressure with a
target temperature and pressure of 300 K and 1 atm were performed in stages: 1)
50 ps with all heavy atoms restrained with 50
kcal·mol−1·Å−1 force
constants; 2) 50 ps with all backbone heavy atoms and experimentally determined
side-chain atoms restrained with 50
kcal·mol−1·Å−1 force
constants; 3) 150 ps with all experimentally-determined heavy atoms restrained
with force constants reduced over the course of the simulation from 25 to 5
kcal·mol−1·Å−1; 4) 100
ps of simulation restraining only the experimentally determined backbone heavy
atoms, over which the force constants of the restraints were brought to 0 from
5.0 kcal·mol−1·Å−1; 5) 100
ps of the unrestrained system. All Langevin dynamics simulations were performed
with a 100 ps−1 damping constant.Each system was then simulated for 30 ns using the Martyna-Tobias-Klein
integrator [52] with a reference temperature of 300 K and a reference
pressure of 1 atm. The barostat mass was set with a time constant of 2 ps and an
equilibrium temperature of 300 K. The masses of all chain variables were set
using a time constant of 1.0 ps. Both the Langevin dynamics and standard
molecular dynamics simulations were performed with all bonds involving hydrogens
constrained, a 2 fs time step for the bonded and short-range nonbonded
interactions and updating of long-range nonbonded interactions every 4 fs using
the RESPA multiple time step approach. Non-bonded interactions were tapered
using force-switching starting at a distance of 9.0 Å to an interaction
cutoff of 9.5 Å. Pairlists were constructed using a distance of 10.5
Å and a migration interval of 12 ps. These parameters were tested in short
simulations in the NVE ensemble to ensure good energy conservation. Coordinates
of the full system were added to the output trajectory every 10 ps.
Principal component analysis
Coordinates of the Cα atoms from the last 20 ns of each unphosphorylated,
Arp2 pThr237, and Arp2 pThr238 simulation were collected into a single
trajectory on which Principal Component Analysis [53], [54] was performed using the
Bio3D package for the R statistical software package [55]. All Cα coordinates were
used after superimposing the Cα atoms of Arp3 subdomains 1 and 2 resolved in
the starting crystal structure (residues 3–39, 51–151,
376–410) of each frame in each trajectory. The first and second principal
components (PCs) account for 62.4% of the variation in atomic
coordinates, and the first 4 principal components account for 84.0%
(). The major differences between the
unphosphorylated and phosphorylated simulations are largely localized to the
first PC, with the second PC capturing variation between the duplicate
simulations of the complex in the same phosphorylation state.
Calculation of number of Arp2-Arp3 contacts
A contact between the Arp2 and Arp3 subunits was defined as the number of heavy
atoms in Arp3 that were within 3.5 Å of any heavy atom in Arp2. The number
of contacts between the Arp2 and Arp3 subunits was calculated for every
10th frame (100 ps) of each simulation. The results for the
duplicate simulations of each wild-type or mutant complex were then pooled and
compared.NPF and F-actin binding affinities were measured by pelleting assays
with rArp2/3 complex. (a) Arp2/3 binding to NPF was similar for
WT, T237/238A-Y202AArp2, R105/106A ARPC1 Arp2/3 complex (b) Arp2/3 binding
to filamentous actin was similar for WT, T237/238A-Y202AArp2, R105/106A
ARPC1 Arp2/3 complex.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Creation of new filament barbed ends upon Arp2/3 complex
activation. (a) Concentrations of filaments from pyreneactin
assembly assays plotted as a function of Arp2/3 concentrations comparing
native and recombinant WT Arp2/3 complex either untreated or treated with
Antarctic Phosphatase. (b) Concentrations of filaments from pyreneactin
assembly assays plotted as a function of Arp2/3 concentrations comparing WT
and recombinant T237/238A-Y202AArp2Arp2/3 complex either untreated or
treated with Antarctic Phosphatase.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Principal component analysis of dominant differences between
unphosphorylated and Arp2 T237 or T238 phosphorylated Arp2/3
complex. (a) Scree plot showing the proportion of variance in
atomic displacement accounted for by each principal component (PC), sorted
from highest to lowest eigenvalue. The total proportion of variance
accounted for by all PCs with equal or greater eigenvalue than a given PC
are indicated next to points on the plot. (b) Snapshots from the last 20 ns
of the duplicate unphosphorylated simulations (black), Arp2 T237
phosphorylated simulations (slate blue), and Arp2T238 phosphorylated
simulations (turquoise) were projected onto the first and second principal
components describing the variation in atomic displacements. Discrimination
of unphosphorylated and phosphorylated states is achieved along the first
principal component, while the second principal component exhibits variation
between the two independent simulations in each phosphorylation state. The
projection of the starting crystal structure (PDB 1K8K [25]) on this set of
principal components is shown as a red triangle. (c) Porcupine plot of the
first principal component showing large subunit rearrangements of Arp2,
ARPC1, and ARPC3 relative to the rest of the complex. The Cα coordinates
displaced by one standard deviation of the conformer distribution from the
average structure (of the unphosphorylated, Arp2pT237, and Arp2pT238
simulations) along the positive direction of PC1 are shown as a chain trace,
and cones are drawn to the Cα coordinates displaced by one standard
deviation of the conformer distribution in the negative direction of PC1.
Since the states sampled by the phosphorylated simulations sample more
negative values of PC1, the cones reflect the direction and relative size of
atomic displacements needed to progress from the unphosphorylated structural
states to the phosphorylated structural states. This image was produced
using the molecular graphics program VMD [57]. Principal component
analysis was performed using the Bio3D package [55] for the R statistical
software program.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Arp2-Arp3 orientation of starting model and phosphorylated Arp2T238
compared with the unphosphorylated simulation. Stereoimages of
Arp3 and Arp2 subunits from a snapshot from the last ns of the
unphosphorylated (Arp3-gray; Arp2-blue) simulation compared with (a)
starting model of unphosphorylated Arp2/3 complex based on the crystal
structure by Robinson, et al [25] (pink, purple) and
(b) a snapshot from the last ns of phosphorylated T238Arp2 (yellow, green)
wild-type simulations are shown following alignment of Cα atoms of
subdomains 1 and 2 of Arp3. The other subunits of the complex from the
snapshot of the unphosphorylated simulation, colored as in Fig. 2a, were represented
as transparent surfaces in order not to occlude the views of Arp2 and
Arp3.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Arp2 average RMSD by residue for wild-type simulations. The
per-residue Cα RMSD averaged over the last 20 ns after alignment of (a)
Arp3 subdomains 1 and 2 or b) Arp2 backbone atoms. The colors are as
follows: U(black)- unphosphorylated; pT237(blue-gray) – phosphorylated
T237 Arp2; pT238(cyan) – phosphorylated T238Arp2.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Interactions in the vicinity of the T238Arp2 phosphorylation
site. Stereoimages of the salt-bridge network between Arp2
(pink), ARPC4 (green), and Arp3 (blue) in the (a) unphosphorylated and the
(b) phosphorylated T238Arp2 simulations, focused on the vicinity of T238.
Portions of the structure have been removed for clarity, including the
backbones of Arp2 residues K253 and R200.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Distribution of hydrogen bond donor-acceptor distances in the vicinity
of the T237 and T238Arp2 phosphorylation sites. The distribution
of minimum distances between hydrogen bond donor and acceptor distances over
the last 20 ns of unphosphorylated (black), T237 Arp2 phosphorylated
(blue-gray), and T238Arp2 phosphorylated (cyan) simulations. (a)–(g)
show interactions in the vicinity of the T237 phosphorylation site, and
(h)–(l) show interactions in the vicinity of the T238 phosphorylation
site. In (f), the black line for the unphosphorylated simulation
superimposes with the cyan line for the phosphorylated T238Arp2 simulation.
Please note that the scales on each plot vary to clearly show similarities
and differences within each independent set of distributions.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Comparison of actin filament end concentrations as a function of Arp2/3
concentration. The plot compares filament end concentrations of
WT versus R105/106A ARPC4Arp2/3 complex either untreated or treated with
Antarctic Phosphatase in the absence or presence of N-WASP VCA.(TIFF)Click here for additional data file.Affinity of Arp2/3 complexes to actin filament pointed ends. The
Arp2/3 complexes and their measured affinities to actin filament pointed
ends are shown for: wild-type recombinant Arp2/3 complex (WT rArp2/3);
Antarctic phosphatase treated wild-type recombinant Arp2/3 complex (AP-WT
rArp2/3); recombinant Arp2/3 complex with Arp2 T237A, T238A, and Y202A
mutations (T237/T238Y202AArp2/3); recombinant Arp2/3 complex with ARPC4R105A and R106A mutations (R105/106A ARPC4Arp2/3); and Antarctic
phosphatase treated recombinant Arp2/3 complex with ARPC4R105A and R106A
mutations (AP-R105/106A ARPC4Arp2/3).(DOC)Click here for additional data file.
Authors: Matthew P Jacobson; David L Pincus; Chaya S Rapp; Tyler J F Day; Barry Honig; David E Shaw; Richard A Friesner Journal: Proteins Date: 2004-05-01
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