| Giuliano, K. A., Khatib, F.
A., Hayden, M., Daoud, E. W. R., Adams, M. E., Amorese, D. A.,
Bernstein, B. W. & Bamburg, J. R. (1988) Properties of Purified
Actin Depolymerizing Factor from Chick Brain, Biochemistry. 27,
8931-8938.
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| Actin
depolymerizing factor (ADF) from 19-day embryonic chick brains has been
purified to greater than 98% homogeneity with a yield of 7.2 mg/100 g of
brain. Quantitative immunoblotting with a monospecific antibody to ADF
indicated that ADF comprises 0.3% of the total brain protein, resulting
in an actual purification yield of about 20%. Brain ADF migrates as a
single polypeptide of 19,000 kDa on SDS-containing polyacrylamide gels.
The molecular weight of the native protein determined from sedimentation
equilibrium in buffers containing from 50 to 200 mM KCl is 20,000. The
secondary structure of ADF calculated from the circular dichroic
spectrum consists of about 22% alpha-helix, 24% beta-sheet, and 18%
beta-turn. ADF contains a blocked N-terminus, a single tryptophan
residue located about one-third of the way from one end of the protein,
and six cysteine residues (all in reduced form in the native protein).
All six cysteine residues could be chemically modified with
eosinylmaleimide under nondenaturing conditions; however, ADF activity
was lost when more than one cysteine residue was modified. ADF
microheterogeneity has been observed upon nonequilibrium pH gradient
electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gels containing 9 M urea, the major
isoform having a pI of congruent to 7.9-8.0. ADF can interact with
either monomeric or filamentous actin to give a complex which can be
isolated by gel filtration chromatography. Both major and minor isoforms
of the ADF are found in the complex. Assembly-competent actin and active
ADF can both be recovered from the complex by chromatography on
ATP-saturated DEAE-cellulose. |
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