Cofilin is a component of intranuclear and cytoplasmic actin rods induced in cultured cells.

0301 basic medicine Cytoplasm Hot Temperature Phalloidine Microfilament Proteins Nerve Tissue Proteins Fibroblasts Binding, Competitive Actins 3. Good health Molecular Weight Mice 03 medical and health sciences Actin Depolymerizing Factors Animals Dimethyl Sulfoxide Carrier Proteins Cells, Cultured Gelsolin
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.84.15.5262 Publication Date: 2006-05-31T10:23:01Z
ABSTRACT
Incubation of cultured cells under specific conditions induces a dramatic change in the actin organization: induction of intranuclear and/or cytoplasmic actin rods (actin paracrystal-like intracellular structures). We have found that cofilin, a 21-kDa actin-binding protein, is a component of these rods. Antibodies directed against cofilin labeled intranuclear actin rods induced in cells treated with dimethyl sulfoxide or exposed to heat shock and also labeled cytoplasmic actin rods induced in cells incubated in specific salt buffers. Moreover, we found that these actin rods are not stained with fluorescent phalloidin derivatives at all and appear to be right-handed helices, different from straight bundles of F-actin such as stress fibers. In vitro experiments revealed that cofilin and phalloidin compete with each other for binding to F-actin. Since cofilin and phalloidin have the ability to stoichiometrically bind actin molecule in the filament in vitro, the above results seem to suggest that cofilin directly binds to actin molecule in nearly an equimolar ratio in these rods. We call these rods "actin/cofilin rods."
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