| Moriyama, K. & Yahara,
I. (2002) Human CAP1 is a key factor in the recycling of cofilin and
actin for rapid actin turnover., J.Cell Sci. 115, 1591-1601. |
| Cofilin-ADF (actin-depolymerizing
factor) is an essential driver of actin-based motility. We discovered
two proteins, p65 and p55, that are components of the actin-cofilin
complex in a human HEK293 cell extract and identified p55 as CAP1/ASP56,
a human homologue of yeast CAP/SRV2 (cyclase-associated protein). CAP is
a bifunctional protein with an N-terminal domain that binds to Ras-responsive
adenylyl cyclase and a C-terminal domain that inhibits actin
polymerization. Surprisingly, we found that the N-terminal domain of
CAP1, but not the C-terminal domain, is responsible for the interaction
with the actin-cofilin complex. The N-terminal domain of CAP1 was also
found to accelerate the depolymerization of F-actin at the pointed end,
which was further enhanced in the presence of cofilin and/or the
C-terminal domain of CAP1. Moreover, CAP1 and its C-terminal domain were
observed to facilitate filament elongation at the barbed end and to
stimulate ADP-ATP exchange on G-actin, a process that regenerates easily
polymerizable G-actin. Although cofilin inhibited the nucleotide
exchange on G-actin even in the presence of the C-terminal domain of
CAP1, its N-terminal domain relieved this inhibition. Thus, CAP1 plays a
key role in speeding up the turnover of actin filaments by effectively
recycling cofilin and actin and through its effect on both ends of actin
filament. |
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