Abstract

Dematin (band 4.9) is an F-actin binding and bundling protein best known for its role within red blood cells, where it both stabilizes as well as attaches the spectrin/actin cytoskeleton to the erythrocytic membrane. Here, we investigate the structural consequences of phosphorylating serine 381, a covalent modification that turns off F-actin bundling activity. In contrast to the canonical doctrine, in which phosphorylation of an intrinsically disordered region/protein confers affinity for another domain/protein, we found the converse to be true of dematin: phosphorylation of the well folded C-terminal villin-type headpiece confers affinity for its intrinsically disordered N-terminal core domain. We employed analytical ultracentrifugation to demonstrate that dematin is monomeric, in contrast to the prevailing view that it is trimeric. Next, using a series of truncation mutants, we verified that dematin has two F-actin binding sites, one in the core domain and the other in the headpiece domain. Although the phosphorylation-mimicking mutant, S381E, was incapable of bundling microfilaments, it retains the ability to bind F-actin. We found that a phosphorylation-mimicking mutant, S381E, eliminated the ability to bundle, but not bind F-actin filaments. Lastly, we show that the S381E point mutant caused the headpiece domain to associate with the core domain, leading us to the mechanism for cAMP-dependent kinase control of dematin's F-actin bundling activity: when unphosphorylated, dematin's two F-actin binding domains move independent of one another permitting them to bind different F-actin filaments. Phosphorylation causes these two domains to associate, forming a compact structure, and sterically eliminating one of these F-actin binding sites.

Highlights

  • Protein kinase A regulates the stability of the erythrocyte via phosphorylation of the cytoskeletal protein dematin

  • We investigated the role of dematin natively unfolded core domain with respect to its F-actin binding and bundling activity

  • The unphosphorylated headpiece domain is covalently tethered to the core domain by the peptide backbone, our Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) analysis demonstrates that their molecular motions are independent of one another

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Summary

Background

Protein kinase A regulates the stability of the erythrocyte via phosphorylation of the cytoskeletal protein dematin (band 4.9). Dematin (band 4.9) is an F-actin binding and bundling protein best known for its role within red blood cells, where it both stabilizes as well as attaches the spectrin/actin cytoskeleton to the erythrocytic membrane. Known as Band 4.9, is a 43– 46-kDa F-actin binding and bundling protein, found in several tissue types throughout the human body [1,2,3] It is best known for its role within the red blood cell, where it has been localized to the junctional complex [4], a macromolecular association of at least seven different proteins that surround a short actin protofilament. We study the dynamic interaction between the dematin headpiece and the natively unfolded core domain and demonstrate that this association is controlled by PKA phosphorylation and is responsible for regulating dematin’s F-actin bundling activity

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