| Abe, H., Obinata, T.,
Minamide, L. & Bamburg, J. (1996) Xenopus laevis
actin-depolymerizing factor/cofilin: a phosphorylation-regulated protein
essential for development. J Cell Biol. 132, 871-885.
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| Two cDNAs, isolated from a Xenopus
laevis embryonic library, encode proteins of 168 amino acids, both of
which are 77% identical to chick cofilin and 66% identical to chick
actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF), two structurally and functionally
related proteins. These Xenopus ADF/cofilins (XADs) differ from each
other in 12 residues spread throughout the sequence but do not differ in
charge. Purified GST-fusion proteins have pH-dependent
actin-depolymerizing and F-actin-binding activities similar to chick ADF
and cofilin. Similarities in the developmental and tissue specific
expression, embryonic localization, and in the cDNA sequence of the
noncoding regions, suggest that the two XACs arise from allelic variants
of the pseudotetraploid X. laevis. Immunofluorescence localization of
XAC in oocyte sections with an XAC-specific monoclonal antibody shows it
to be diffuse in the cortical cytoplasm. After fertilization, increased
immunostaining is observed in two regions: along the membrane,
particularly that of the vegetal hemisphere, and at the interface
between the cortical and animal hemisphere cytoplasm. The cleavage
furrow and the mid-body structure are stained at the end of first
cleavage. Neuroectoderm derived tissues, notochord, somites, and
epidermis stain heavily either continuously or transiently from stages
18-34. A phosphorylated form of XAC (pXAC) was identified by 2D Western
blotting, and it is the only species found in oocytes. Dephosphorylation
of >60% of the pXAC occurs within 30 min after fertilization.
Injection of one blastomere at the 2 cell stage, either with
constitutively active XAC or with an XAC inhibitory antibody, blocked
cleavage of only the injected blastomere in a concentration-dependent
manner without inhibiting nuclear division. The cleavage furrow of eggs
injected with constitutively active XAC completely regressed.
Blastomeres injected with neutralized antibody developed normally. These
results suggest that XAC is necessary for cytokinesis and that its
activity must be properly regulated for cleavage to occur. |
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