Abstract

Bulk solution assays have shown that the isolated CARMIL homology 3 (CAH3) domain from mouse and Acanthamoeba CARMIL rapidly and potently restores actin polymerization when added to actin filaments previously capped with capping protein (CP). To demonstrate this putative uncapping activity directly, we used total internal reflection microscopy to observe single, CP-capped actin filaments before and after the addition of the CAH3 domain from mouse CARMIL-1 (mCAH3). The addition of mCAH3 rapidly restored the polymerization of individual capped filaments, consistent with uncapping. To verify uncapping, filaments were capped with recombinant mouse CP tagged with monomeric green fluorescent protein (mGFP-CP). Restoration of polymerization upon the addition of mCAH3 was immediately preceded by the complete dissociation of mGFP-CP from the filament end, confirming the CAH3-driven uncapping mechanism. Quantitative analyses showed that the percentage of capped filaments that uncapped increased as the concentration of mCAH3 was increased, reaching a maximum of approximately 90% at approximately 250 nm mCAH3. Moreover, the time interval between mCAH3 addition and uncapping decreased as the concentration of mCAH3 increased, with the half-time of CP at the barbed end decreasing from approximately 30 min without mCAH3 to approximately 10 s with a saturating amount of mCAH3. Finally, using mCAH3 tagged with mGFP, we obtained direct evidence that the complex of CP and mCAH3 has a small but measurable affinity for the barbed end, as inferred from previous studies and kinetic modeling. We conclude that the isolated CAH3 domain of CARMIL (and presumably the intact molecule as well) possesses the ability to uncap CP-capped actin filaments.

Highlights

  • One possible cellular regulator of capping protein (CP) function is CARMIL

  • Establishment of the total internal reflection (TIRF)-based Uncapping Assay—Fig. 1A describes in schematic form the TIRF-based assay that we used to observe the uncapping of CP-capped actin filaments by mCAH3

  • This 8.5-min observational period was chosen because (i) solution-based measurements of the putative uncapping activity of mCAH3 (21, 23) indicate that this length of time is more than sufficient to estimate the uncapping activity of mCAH3 even at low concentrations of mCAH3, and (ii) beyond ϳ10 min, the density of actin filaments under our standard assay conditions becomes so high that quantitating the behavior of individual filaments becomes problematic due to filament overlap

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Summary

Introduction

One possible cellular regulator of CP function is CARMIL. CARMIL proteins comprise a recently identified family of molecules whose two most conspicuous features are a central, leucine-rich repeat domain and a C-terminal proline-rich domain (16, 17).

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