Abstract

beta-Thymosins are the currently favored candidates for maintaining the large actin monomer (G-actin) pool in living cells. To determine if beta-thymosin behaves like a simple G-actin buffering agent in the complex environment of a cell, we overexpressed thymosin beta10 (Tbeta 10) in NIH3T3 cells and determined the effect on the monomer/polymer equilibrium. Tbeta 10 is the predominant beta-thymosin isoform in the NIH3T3 cell line, and it is present in approximately equal molar ratio to profilin and cofilin/actin depolymerizing factor, two other well characterized actin monomer binding proteins. Clonal cell lines that overexpressed three times more Tbeta 10 had 23-33% more polymerized actin than control cells, and the filaments appeared thicker after staining with fluorescent phalloidin. There was no change in total actin, profilin, and cofilin/actin depolymerizing factor content. The overexpressing cells were more motile; they spread faster and had higher chemotactic and wound healing activity. Assuming that there is no compensatory inactivation of the other classes of monomer binding proteins, our paradoxical observation can be accounted for quantitatively by a parallel in vitro study (Carlier, M.-F., Didry, D., Erk, I., Lepault, J., Van Troys, L., Vanderkekove, J., Perelroizen, I., Yin, H. L., Doi, Y., and Pantaloni, D., (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 9231-9239). beta-Thymosin at levels comparable with that found in the overexpressing cells binds actin filaments and decreases the critical concentration (C(c)) for actin polymerization. This reduces the monomer buffering ability of beta-thymosin, so that above a certain threshold an incremental increase in thymosin does not lead to a corresponding increase in G-actin. Furthermore, the decrease in C(c) reduces the buffering capacity of the other actin monomer binding proteins. As a consequence, an increase in beta-thymosin does not necessarily result in a proportionate increase in actin monomer content in a complex environment containing other actin monomer binding proteins. The outcome depends on the level of beta-thymosin expression relative to the composition of the other actin monomer binding protein. Our results suggest that beta-thymosins are not simple actin buffering proteins and that their biphasic action may have physiological significance.

Highlights

  • The actin cytoskeleton of nonmuscle cells responds to extracellular stimuli through a spatially and temporally regulated series of polymerization and depolymerization reactions

  • T␤10 is the predominant ␤-thymosin isoform in the NIH3T3 cell line, and it is present in approximately equal molar ratio to profilin and cofilin/ actin depolymerizing factor, two other well characterized actin monomer binding proteins

  • We examined the fundamental assumption that ␤-thymosin behaves like a simple actin monomer-buffering protein in the intracellular milieu. ␤-Thymosin was overexpressed to a moderate level by cDNA mediated transfection, and the consequences on the polymer/monomer equilibrium were examined

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Summary

INSIGHTS FROM OVEREXPRESSION STUDIES*

(Received for publication, October 17, 1995, and in revised form, January 8, 1996). Hui-Qiao Sun, Katarzyna Kwiatkowska, and Helen Lu Yin‡ From the Department of Physiology, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235-9040. ␤-Thymosin at levels comparable with that found in the overexpressing cells binds actin filaments and decreases the critical concentration (Cc) for actin polymerization. We find that a 3-fold increase in the predominant ␤-thymosin isoform (T␤10) in NIH3T3 cells enhanced cell spreading, chemotaxis, and wound healing It decreased the G-actin pool, contrary to the expectation for an exclusively buffering function. The paradoxical result may be explained by our recent in vitro studies, which show that thymosin ␤4 (T␤4), an isoform that is functionally identical to T␤10 [14], binds actin filaments with low affinity and decreases the Cc [47] This reduces the impact of ␤-thymosin overexpres-. Actin Monomer Polymer Equilibrium/␤-Thymosin Overexpression sion and has repercussions for all the other monomer-binding proteins in the intracellular milieu as well

Cell Culture and Transfection
Quantitative Immunoblotting
Analytical HPLC
Northern Blotting
Fluorescence Microscopy and Image Processing
Morphometric Analysis
Quantitation of Actin Filament Content
Cell Spreading Assay
RESULTS
Cell line
DISCUSSION
Sequestered total
Fully spread
Full Text
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