Title of article
Mechanism of Actin Network Attachment to Moving Membranes: Barbed End Capture by N-WASP WH2 Domains
Author/Authors
Carl Co، نويسنده , , Derek T. Wong، نويسنده , , Sarah Gierke، نويسنده , , Vicky Chang، نويسنده , , Jack Taunton، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
13
From page
901
To page
913
Abstract
Actin filament networks exert protrusive and attachment forces on membranes and thereby drive membrane deformation and movement. Here, we show that N-WASP WH2 domains play a previously unanticipated role in vesicle movement by transiently attaching actin filament barbed ends to the membrane. To dissect the attachment mechanism, we reconstituted the propulsive motility of lipid-coated glass beads, using purified soluble proteins. N-WASP WH2 mutants assembled actin comet tails and initiated movement, but the comet tails catastrophically detached from the membrane. When presented on the surface of a lipid-coated bead, WH2 domains were sufficient to maintain comet tail attachment. In v-Src-transformed fibroblasts, N-WASP WH2 mutants were severely defective in the formation of circular podosome arrays. In addition to creating an attachment force, interactions between WH2 domains and barbed ends may locally amplify signals for dendritic actin nucleation.
Journal title
CELL
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
CELL
Record number
1018566
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