Abstract

The actin-binding protein cortactin promotes the formation and maintenance of actin-rich structures, including lamellipodial protrusions in fibroblasts and neuronal dendritic spines. Cortactin cellular functions have been attributed to its activation of the Arp2/3 complex, which stimulates actin branch nucleation, and to its recruitment of Rho family GTPase regulators. Cortactin also binds actin filaments and significantly slows filament depolymerization, but the mechanism by which it does so and the relationship between actin binding and stabilization are unclear. Here we elucidated the cortactin regions that are necessary and sufficient for actin filament binding and stabilization. Using actin cosedimentation assays, we found that the cortactin repeat region binds actin but that the adjacent linker region is required for binding with the same affinity as full-length cortactin. Using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to measure the rates of single filament actin depolymerization, we observed that cortactin-actin interactions are sufficient to stabilize actin filaments. Moreover, conserved charged residues in repeat 4 were necessary for high-affinity actin binding, and substitution of these residues significantly impaired cortactin-mediated actin stabilization. Cortactin bound actin with higher affinity than did its paralog, hematopoietic cell-specific Lyn substrate 1 (HS1), and the effects on actin stability were specific to cortactin. Finally, cortactin stabilized ADP-actin filaments, indicating that the stabilization mechanism does not depend on the actin nucleotide state. Together, these results indicate that cortactin binding to actin is necessary and sufficient to stabilize filaments in a concentration-dependent manner, specific to conserved residues in the cortactin repeats, and independent of the actin nucleotide state.

Highlights

  • The cortactin repeat region binds actin, and the affinity is increased by a 77-amino acid adjacent linker

  • We used cosedimentation assays to identify the regions of at a ratio of 1 CR16L:2.5 monomers, and CR36L bound at cortactin that mediate high-affinity binding to actin filaments. almost a 1:1 molar ratio with actin monomers (Figs. 1G and 2G)

  • CR16L(DKS/AAA) did not stabilize filaments, and it yielded rates significantly different from CR16L or full-length cortactin (Ϫ4.3 Ϯ 0.4 subunits/s). These results demonstrate that limited or point substitutions in the cortactin repeat region disrupt actin binding and that these residues are critical for actin filament stabilization by cortactin

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Summary

Results

The cortactin repeat region binds actin, and the affinity is increased by a 77-amino acid adjacent linker. Our measurements revealed the stoichiometry of each cortactin protein that saturated binding to actin filaments. Fulllength cortactin bound at a ratio of 1 cortactin: actin monomers, as published previously (Fig. 1G) [31, 32]. We used cosedimentation assays to identify the regions of at a ratio of 1 CR16L:2.5 monomers, and CR36L bound at cortactin that mediate high-affinity binding to actin filaments. Almost a 1:1 molar ratio with actin monomers We used cosedimentation assays to identify the regions of at a ratio of 1 CR16L:2.5 monomers, and CR36L bound at cortactin that mediate high-affinity binding to actin filaments. almost a 1:1 molar ratio with actin monomers (Figs. 1G and 2G)

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Discussion
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