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Vol. 14, Issue 4, 1709-1716, April 2003

and
*Institute of Cytology Russian Academy of Sciences, St.
Petersburg 194064, Russia; and Ion transport in various tissues can be regulated by the cortical
actin cytoskeleton. Specifically, involvement of actin dynamics in the regulation of nonvoltage-gated sodium channels has been shown.
Herein, inside-out patch clamp experiments were performed to study the
effect of the heterodimeric actin capping protein CapZ on sodium
channel regulation in leukemia K562 cells. The channels were activated
by cytochalasin-induced disruption of actin filaments and inactivated
by G-actin under ionic conditions promoting rapid actin polymerization.
CapZ had no direct effect on channel activity. However, being added
together with G-actin, CapZ prevented actin-induced channel
inactivation, and this effect occurred at CapZ/actin molar ratios from
1:5 to 1:100. When actin was allowed to polymerize at the plasma
membrane to induce partial channel inactivation, subsequent addition of
CapZ restored the channel activity. These results can be explained by
CapZ-induced inhibition of further assembly of actin filaments at the
plasma membrane due to the modification of actin dynamics by CapZ. No effect on the channel activity was observed in response to F-actin, confirming that the mechanism of channel inactivation does not involve
interaction of the channel with preformed filaments. Our data show that
actin-capping protein can participate in the cytoskeleton-associated regulation of sodium transport in nonexcitable cells.
Department of
Biochemical Cell Biology, University of Bielefeld, 33501 Bielefeld,
Germany
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
yurineg{at}link.cytspb.rssi.ru.
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