Aizawa, H., Katadae,
M., Maruya, M., Sameshima, M., Murakami-Murofushi, K. & Yahara, I.
(1999) Hyperosmotic stress-induced reorganization of actin bundles in Dictyostelium
cells over-expressing cofilin. Genes to Cells. 4, 311-324.
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| Cofilin is a low-molecular weight
actin-modulating protein, which binds to, severs, and depolymerizes
actin filaments in vitro. Aip1, an actin-interacting protein, was
recently identified as a product of a gene on a multicopy plasmid which
suppresses the temperature-sensitive phenotype of a cofilin mutant in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Actin cytoskeleton plays an essential role in
resistance to hyperosmotic stress in Dictyostelium discoideum. The roles
of cofilin and Aip1 in this resistance are not known. RESULTS: In
response to hyperosmotic stress, D. discoideum cells round up. This
stress-induced morphological change involves the redistribution of
cofilin, together with actin filaments, into cortical contractile
portions of the cells, followed by their contraction. Over-expression of
cofilin increases and thickens cortical actin bundles in cells. The
bundles become tight and are reorganized into a ring-shaped structure in
response to hyperosmotic stress. The ring structure of actin bundles had
two characteristic bands across them; bright and dark bands, heavily
stained and not stained with phalloidin. In the bundles, straight
filaments with a diameter of 5.3-nm were aligned parallel by
cross-bridge structures. In cells lacking the myosin-II heavy chain, the
bundles, which were induced by an over-expression of cofilin, shortened
and became straight following hyperosmotic stress, forming a polygonal
structure. D. discoideum Aip1/Wrp2 enhanced the severing of actin
filaments by cofilin in vitro and colocalized with cofilin in cells,
including those that were over-expressing cofilin before and after
exposure to hyperosmotic stress. CONCLUSIONS: Cofilin plays a pivotal
role in concert with Aip1/Wrp2 in the reorganization of actin
architectures into bundles that contract in a myosin-II-independent
manner, in response to hyperosmotic stress. |
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