The thermodynamics and kinetics of actin interaction with Arabidopsis thaliana actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF)1, human ADF, and S6D mutant ADF1 protein mimicking phosphorylated (inactive) ADF are examined comparatively. ADFs interact with ADP.G-actin in rapid equilibrium (k+ = 155 microM-1.s-1 and k- = 16 s-1 at 4 degreesC under physiological ionic conditions). The kinetics of interaction of plant and human ADFs with F-actin are slower and exhibit kinetic cooperativity, consistent with a scheme in which the initial binding of ADF to two adjacent subunits of the filament nucleates a structural change that propagates along the filament, allowing faster binding of ADF in a "zipper" mode. ADF binds in a non-cooperative faster process to gelsolin-capped filaments or to subtilisin-cleaved F-actin, which are structurally different from standard filaments (Orlova, A., Prochniewicz, E., and Egelman, E. H. (1995) J. Mol. Biol. 245, 598-607). In contrast, the binding of phalloidin to F-actin cooperatively inhibits its interaction with ADF. The ADF-facilitated nucleation of ADP.actin self-assembly indicates that ADF stabilizes lateral interactions in the filament. Plant and human ADFs cause only partial depolymerization of F-actin at pH 8, consistent with identical functions in enhancing F-actin dynamics. Phosphorylation does not affect ADF activity per se, but decreases its affinity for actin by 20-fold.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.33.20894 | DOI Listing |
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