Androcam replaces calmodulin as a tissue-specific myosin VI light chain on the actin cones that mediate D. melanogaster spermatid individualization. We show that the androcam structure and its binding to the myosin VI structural (Insert 2) and regulatory (IQ) light chain sites are distinct from those of calmodulin and provide a basis for specialized myosin VI function. The androcam N lobe noncanonically binds a single Ca(2+) and is locked in a "closed" conformation, causing androcam to contact the Insert 2 site with its C lobe only. Androcam replacing calmodulin at Insert 2 will increase myosin VI lever arm flexibility, which may favor the compact monomeric form of myosin VI that functions on the actin cones by facilitating the collapse of the C-terminal region onto the motor domain. The tethered androcam N lobe could stabilize the monomer through contacts with C-terminal portions of the motor or recruit other components to the actin cones. Androcam binds the IQ site at all calcium levels, constitutively mimicking a conformation adopted by calmodulin only at intermediate calcium levels. Thus, androcam replacing calmodulin at IQ will abolish a Ca(2+)-regulated, calmodulin-mediated myosin VI structural change. We propose that the N lobe prevents androcam from interfering with other calmodulin-mediated Ca(2+) signaling events. We discuss how gene duplication and mutations that selectively stabilize one of the many conformations available to calmodulin support the molecular evolution of structurally and functionally distinct calmodulin-like proteins.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1209730109 | DOI Listing |
Mol Biol Cell
December 2024
Department of Neuroscience, Jefferson Center for Synaptic Biology, Vickie and Jack Farber Institute for Neuroscience, Sydney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA 19107.
Development of neuronal connections is spatially and temporally controlled by extracellular cues which often activate their cognate cell surface receptors and elicit localized cellular responses. Here, we demonstrate the use of an optogenetic tool to activate receptor signaling locally to induce actin-mediated growth cone remodeling in neurons. Based on the light-induced interaction of light between Cryptochrome 2 (CRY2) and CIB1, we generated a bicistronic vector to co-expresses CRY2 fused to the intracellular domain of a guidance receptor and a membrane-anchored CIB1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol Investig
December 2024
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan.
Advillin is an actin-binding protein involved in regulating the organization of actin filaments and the dynamics of axonal growth cones. In mice, advillin is exclusively expressed in somatosensory neurons, ubiquitously expressed in all neuron subtypes during neonatal ages and particularly enriched in isolectin B4-positive (IB4+) non-peptidergic neurons in adulthood. We previously showed that advillin plays a key role in axon regeneration of somatosensory neurons during peripheral neuropathy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
December 2024
Montreal Clinical Research Institute (IRCM), 110 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, Quebec H2W 1R7, Canada.
During development, Shh attracts axons of spinal cord commissural neurons to the floor plate. Shh-mediated attraction of commissural axons requires the receptor Boc. How Boc regulates cytoskeletal changes in growth cones in response to Shh is not fully understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Biomed Imaging
November 2024
Université Bordeaux, CNRS, LP2IB, Chemical Imaging and Speciation, UMR 5797, 33170 Gradignan, France.
Essential metals such as iron, copper, and zinc are required for a wide variety of biological processes. For example, they act as cofactors in many proteins, conferring enzymatic activity or structural stability. Interactions between metals and proteins are often difficult to characterize due to the low concentration of metals in biological tissues and the sometimes labile nature of the chemical bonds involved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Cell
December 2024
Department of Medicine, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine and Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA 02118.
Microtubule (MT) and F-actin cytoskeletal cross-talk and organization are important aspects of axon guidance mechanisms, but how associated proteins facilitate this function remains largely unknown. While the MT-associated protein, CKAP5 (XMAP215/ch-TOG), has been best characterized as a MT polymerase, we have recently highlighted a novel role for CKAP5 in facilitating interactions between MT and F-actin and in embryonic neuronal growth cones. However, the mechanism by which it does so is unclear.
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