Abstract

Mutations in vascular smooth muscle α-actin (SM α-actin), encoded by ACTA2, are the most common cause of familial thoracic aortic aneurysms that lead to dissection (TAAD). The R179H mutation has a poor patient prognosis and is unique in causing multisystemic smooth muscle dysfunction (Milewicz, D. M., Østergaard, J. R., Ala-Kokko, L. M., Khan, N., Grange, D. K., Mendoza-Londono, R., Bradley, T. J., Olney, A. H., Ades, L., Maher, J. F., Guo, D., Buja, L. M., Kim, D., Hyland, J. C., and Regalado, E. S. (2010) Am. J. Med. Genet. A 152A, 2437-2443). Here, we characterize this mutation in expressed human SM α-actin. R179H actin shows severe polymerization defects, with a 40-fold higher critical concentration for assembly than WT SM α-actin, driven by a high disassembly rate. The mutant filaments are more readily severed by cofilin. Both defects are attenuated by copolymerization with WT. The R179H monomer binds more tightly to profilin, and formin binding suppresses nucleation and slows polymerization rates. Linear filaments will thus not be readily formed, and cells expressing R179H actin will likely have increased levels of monomeric G-actin. The cotranscription factor myocardin-related transcription factor-A, which affects cellular phenotype, binds R179H actin with less cooperativity than WT actin. Smooth muscle myosin moves R179H filaments more slowly than WT, even when copolymerized with equimolar amounts of WT. The marked decrease in the ability to form filaments may contribute to the poor patient prognosis and explain why R179H disrupts even visceral smooth muscle cell function where the SM α-actin isoform is present in low amounts. The R179H mutation has the potential to affect actin structure and function in both the contractile domain of the cell and the more dynamic cytoskeletal pool of actin, both of which are required for contraction.

Highlights

  • Aneurysms that lead to dissection (TAAD), with more than 40 mutations in ACTA2 identified to date [1,2,3,4,5]

  • Smooth muscles are unique in that force production following agonist activation requires a small amount of actin polymerization in the more dynamic cytoskeletal domain of a smooth muscle cell, where it strengthens the membrane for force transmission to the extracellular matrix [7]

  • An important aspect of this work is that the effect of the mutation was studied in the actin isoform that is expressed in human vascular smooth muscle cells

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Summary

Introduction

Aneurysms that lead to dissection (TAAD), with more than 40 mutations in ACTA2 identified to date [1,2,3,4,5]. It is predicted that at the molecular level, mutations in SM ␣-actin may profoundly affect its interaction with myosin, with other actin protomers in the filament, with actin-binding proteins that affect the monomer-polymer equilibrium in the cell, and with binding partners that influence cellular phenotype. Many of these ideas were experimentally confirmed in our recent paper that investigated the effect of the R258C mutation on expressed human SM ␣-actin function [10]. This residue is highly conserved in actin, and OCTOBER 7, 2016 VOLUME 291 NUMBER 41

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