Abstract

When nerve growth factor is added to F-actin, well-ordered bundles of filaments are formed. These bundles are observed even at low concentrations of NGF †1 †1 Abbreviations used: NGF, nerve growth factor; SucNBr, N-bromosuccinimide. , but when N-bromosuccinimide-treated NGF, a biologically inactive form of the protein is used, a much higher concentration is required to produce aggregation. Moreover, the bundles induced by the modified NGF are not very well ordered and show amorphous aggregates attached at various points. Electron microscopy of paracrystals induced by native NGF shows that, although they resemble pure actin paracrystals induced by Mg 2+, the interfilament spacing is larger and bridges connect the filaments. Optical diffraction patterns show, in addition to the off-meridional reflections characteristic of the actin helix, meridional reflections on the first and fourth layer-lines, at axial spacings of 37 and 9 nm. Measurements of the axial positions of the layer-lines show that the actin helical symmetry is not significantly different from that in pure actin paracrystals. The presence of the meridional reflections indicates that groups of two or three bridges with spacing 9 nm or nearly 9 nm are arranged along the bundles at a repeating interval of 37 nm. Actin filament bundles have been observed in several non-muscle cells, and specific actin-binding proteins have been identified as responsible for this aggregation. Our in vitro observations show that the biologically active form of NGF interacts with actin and organizes it into well-ordered paracrystalline arrays. The in vitro formation of NGF-actin complexes may be related to the in vivo mechanism of action of this growth factor.

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