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Vol. 17, Issue 5, 2190-2199, May 2006
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Department of Pathology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322
Submitted November 4, 2005;
Revised February 6, 2006;
Accepted February 24, 2006
Monitoring Editor: Thomas Pollard
| ABSTRACT |
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-propeller, whereas one residue is located in the C-terminal
-propeller, suggesting the presence of two separate sites for interaction with ADF/cofilin and actin. In vitro, these mutant UNC-78 proteins exhibited variable alterations in actin disassembly and/or barbed end-capping activities, suggesting that both activities are important for its in vivo function. These results indicate that the actin-regulating activity of AIP1 in cooperation with ADF/cofilin is essential for its in vivo function to regulate actin filament organization in muscle cells. | INTRODUCTION |
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Actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF)/cofilin is one of the essential proteins that accelerate turnover of actin filaments by depolymerizing actin monomers from the pointed ends and severing filaments (Bamburg, 1999
; Bamburg et al., 1999
; Carlier et al., 1999
; Maciver and Hussey, 2002
; DesMarais et al., 2005
). The activity of ADF/cofilin is regulated by several mechanisms, including phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, pH, phosphoinositides, and competition with other actin-binding proteins (DesMarais et al., 2005
). Actin-interacting protein (AIP) 1 is a unique regulator of ADF/cofilin that enhances actin depolymerization in the presence of ADF/cofilin (Ono, 2003
). AIP1 is a conserved WD-repeat protein (Amberg et al., 1995
), and its involvement in the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton has been demonstrated in several model systems. For example, AIP1 is required for actin-rich membrane protrusion (Rogers et al., 2003
), myofibril assembly (Ono, 2001
), and plant development (Ketelaar et al., 2004
), and it is involved in endocytosis, cell movement, and cytokinesis (Konzok et al., 1999
). AIP1 functionally interacts with ADF/cofilin in vivo as determined in yeast (Iida and Yahara, 1999
; Rodal et al., 1999
) and Caenorhabditis elegans (Ono, 2001
).
In vitro, AIP1 enhances disassembly of ADF/cofilin-bound actin filaments (Aizawa et al., 1999
; Okada et al., 1999
; Rodal et al., 1999
; Mohri and Ono, 2003
). However, the mechanism of this action remains unclear because AIP1 exhibits complex biochemical activity. AIP1 caps the barbed ends of ADF/cofilin-bound actin filaments, and this activity has been proposed to promote disassembly by preventing elongation and reannealing (Okada et al., 2002
; Balcer et al., 2003
). However, direct microscopic observation of the AIP1 activity suggests that AIP1 actively severs or depolymerizes filaments (Ono et al., 2004
). Crystal structures of yeast AIP1 (Voegtli et al., 2003
) and C. elegans AIP1 (UNC-78) (Mohri et al., 2004
) revealed 14 WD-modules that are arranged into two seven-bladed
-propeller domains. Mutagenesis of conserved surface residues identified five clustered residues in the N-terminal propeller domain that are important for the in vitro actin disassembly activity of AIP1 (Mohri et al., 2004
). Furthermore, mutations of these residues did not affect the capping activity, suggesting that disassembly and capping are separable functions of AIP1 that can be uncoupled by point mutations. AIP1 also binds to the side of ADF/cofilin-decorated filaments (Okada et al., 2002
). However, how these complex activities of AIP1 influence the in vivo actin dynamics are not understood.
Here, we performed a correlative study on in vivo and in vitro activities of various mutants of AIP1 by using C. elegans and found that the activity of AIP1 to enhance actin disassembly is required for organized assembly of actin filaments in striated muscle. The functional residues on C. elegans AIP1 identified in this study are conserved among AIP1 proteins in eukaryotes and may be commonly utilized for the actin-regulating activity of AIP1 in cooperation with ADF/cofilin.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Construction of Expression Vectors
The 1.4-kb upstream region of the unc-78 gene was amplified by PCR by using Pfx DNA polymerase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) with 5'-GATCCCGCGGCCTCTTATCAAGCGAAGAACTCG as a forward primer and 5'-GATCGGTACCGTTTGAGAAAATTCCGACATTCTGC as a reverse primer, digested with SacII and KpnI at the sites introduced in the primer sequences (underlined), and ligated with the 5' end of the green fluorescent protein (GFP)-coding sequence at the Sac II-Kpn I sites of a GFP-expression vector pPD117.01 (provided by Andrew Fire, Stanford University, Stanford, CA). Subsequently, the full-length UNC-78 cDNA (yk185g6; provided by Yuji Kohara, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan) was digested with EcoRI and XhoI and ligated in-frame with the 3' end of GFP at the EcoRI-Nhe I sites of the plasmid.
Transgenic Nematodes
The expression vectors for GFP-UNC-78 (20 µg/ml) were mixed with 80 µg/ml pET-32a (Novagen, Madison, WI) as carrier DNA and injected into the distal arm of the hermaphroditic gonad as described previously (Mello and Fire, 1995
). Transformants were selected by expression of GFP as observed by fluorescence microscopy, and at least three transgenic lines with extrachromosomal arrays were established for each expression vector.
Western Blot
Thirty adult worms were picked and lysed in 20 µl of SDS-lysis buffer (2% SDS, 80 mM Tris-HCl, 5%
-mercaptomethanol, 15% glycerol, and 0.05% bromophenol blue, pH 6.8), heated at 97°C for 2 min, homogenized by brief sonication, and heated again at 97°C for 2 min. The samples were resolved by SDS-PAGE by using a 12% acrylamide gel and transferred onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Immobilon-P; Millipore, Billerica, MA). The membrane was blocked in 5% nonfat milk in phosphate-buffered saline containing 0.1% Tween 20 for 30 min and incubated with anti-UNC-78 antibody (Mohri and Ono, 2003
) for 1 h followed by treatment with peroxidase-labeled goat anti-mouse IgG (Pierce Chemical, Rockford, IL). The reactivity was detected with a SuperSignal chemiluminescence reagent (Pierce Chemical). The membrane was treated with a buffer containing 2% SDS, 100 mM
-mercaptoethanol, and 62.5 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, at 50°C for 30 min to remove bound probes and reprobed with mouse monoclonal anti-actin antibody (C4; MP Biomedicals, Irvine, CA) as a loading control.
Site-directed Mutagenesis
Mutagenesis was performed with a QuikChange mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) by using pGEX-UNC-78 or pGFP-UNC-78 as a template. To make a quadruple mutant, four mutations were sequentially added by separate mutagenesis reactions in the order of F192A, F182A, D168A, and E126A. The entire UNC-78 coding region was sequenced to confirm the presence of introduced mutations and the absence of PCR-induced errors.
Pelleting Assay for F-Actin Binding and Depolymerization
Rabbit muscle actin (Pardee and Spudich, 1982
), C. elegans actin (Ono, 1999
), and UNC-60B (Ono and Benian, 1998
) were purified as described previously. Glutathione S-transferase (GST)-UNC-78 with or without mutation was bacterially expressed and purified as described previously (Mohri et al., 2004
). An F-actin copelleting assay was performed as described previously (Mohri et al., 2004
) with modifications. Briefly, 10 µM F-actin was incubated with or without 10 or 20 µM UNC-60B and 0.12.0 µM GST-UNC-78 in F-buffer (0.1 M KCl, 2 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol, and 20 mM HEPES-NaOH, pH 7.5) for 30 min at room temperature and centrifuged at 80,000 rpm (285,000 x g) for 20 min in a Beckman TLA-100 rotor. The supernatants and pellets were adjusted to the same volumes and analyzed by SDS-PAGE. Gels were stained with Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 (National Diagnostics, Atlanta, GA) and scanned by a UMAX PowerLook III scanner at 300 dpi, and the band intensity was quantified by Scion Image Beta 4.02 (Scion, Frederick, MD). In some experiments, the conditions for centrifugation were changed to 56,000 rpm (140,000 x g) for 20 min in TLA-100 or 14,000 rpm (18,000 x g) for 10 min in a Beckman Microfuge (Beckman Coulter, Fullerton, CA).
Assay for Barbed End Elongation
A spectroscopic assay to examine actin elongation from filament ends was performed as described previously using rabbit muscle actin as seeds (Yamashiro et al., 2005
). Briefly, 10 µM F-actin from rabbit muscle was mixed for 30 s with or without 10 µM UNC-60B and with or without 1 µM UNC-78 variants in F-buffer and used as seeds for polymerization of pyrene-labeled rabbit muscle G-actin. The kinetics of actin polymerization was measured by the increase in the fluorescence of pyrene and the initial rate in the presence of UNC-60 proteins was compared with that of actin alone.
Light Scattering Assay
F-actin (5 µM) was mixed with GST-UNC-78 and/or UNC-60B in F-buffer, and light scattering at an angle of 90° and a wavelength of 500 nm was measured with an LS50B fluorescence spectrophotometer (PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences, Boston, MA). Slit width was set at 2.5 nm for both excitation and emission.
Fluorescence Microscopy
Immunofluorescent staining of adult worms was performed as described previously (Finney and Ruvkun, 1990
) with anti-UNC-60B antibody (Ono et al., 1999
) or anti-UNC-78 antibody (Mohri and Ono, 2003
) and anti-actin antibody (C4; MP Biomedicals) as primary antibodies, and Cy3-labeled goat anti-rabbit IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA) and Alexa 647-labeled goat anti-mouse antibody (Invitrogen) as secondary antibodies. Staining of worms with tetramethylrhodamine-phalloidin was performed as described previously (Ono, 2001
). Live worms expressing GFP-fusion proteins were anesthetized by 0.1% tricaine and 0.01% tetramisole and mounted on 2% agarose pads as described previously (Ono and Ono, 2004
).
Samples were viewed by epifluorescence using a Nikon Eclipse TE2000 inverted microscope with a CFI Plan Fluor ELWD 40x objective (dry; numerical aperture [N.A.] 0.60) or a CFI Plan Apo 60x objective (oil; N.A. 1.4). Images were captured by a SPOT RT monochrome charge-coupled device camera (Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI) and processed by the IPLab imaging software (Scanalytics, Rockville, MD) and Adobe Photoshop 6.0 (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA).
Motility Assay
Worm motility was quantified as described previously (Epstein and Thomson, 1974
). Briefly, adult worms were placed in M9 buffer. Then, one beat was counted when a worm swung its head to either right or left. The total number of beats in 30 s was recorded.
| RESULTS |
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The transgenes were maintained as extrachromosomal arrays that are inherited independently from the chromosomes (Mello et al., 1991
). Because each array has different characteristics in the level of gene expression, we isolated three independent strains and characterized their phenotypes. Western blot analysis showed that GFP-UNC-78 was expressed at comparable levels to endogenously expressed UNC-78 in wild-type (Figure 1F). All three strains showed significantly improved worm motility compared with the unc-78-null mutant, but the motility was not as fast as wild type (Figure 1G). Many of the transgenic worms had a few cells with no expression of GFP-UNC-78, probably because of loss of the extrachromosomal arrays, and these cells have disorganized actin filaments (our unpublished data). Such mosaic expression of the transgene is a likely explanation for incomplete restoration of worm motility. From these observations, we concluded that GFP-UNC-78 is functional and behaves normally in the muscle cells and that the unc-78 promoter and the GFP-UNC-78 fusion protein are appropriate tools for genetic manipulation and functional analysis of the UNC-78 protein in vivo.
Residues of UNC-78 That Are Important for Actin Filament Disassembly Are Required for Organized Actin Assembly
We previously identified five functional residues of UNC-78 (E126, D168, K181, F182, and F192) that are important for disassembly of ADF/cofilin-bound actin filaments in vitro (Mohri et al., 2004
). To determine whether these residues are essential for myofibril assembly in vivo, they were converted to alanine in GFP-UNC-78, and the mutants were expressed in the unc-78-null background and tested for their ability to rescue the phenotype. We isolated three independent transgenic strains for each mutant and examined the expression levels of GFP-UNC-78 and worm motility (Figure 2). The levels of expression were variable among the transgenic strains (Figure 2A). Surprisingly, all five single mutants rescued worm motility to similar levels to wild-type GFP-UNC-78 (Figure 2B). Apparently, there was no good correlation between the expression level and the extent of rescue. Therefore, we selected one strain for each mutant that expresses a similar level of GFP-UNC-78 to endogenous UNC-78 in wild-type (selected strains are marked by asterisks in Figure 2) and further examined actin filament organization and localization of GFP-UNC-78 and UNC-60B in body wall muscle cells.
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-propeller domain, and the in vitro actin disassembly activity of the single mutants is reduced but not abolished (Mohri et al., 2004
To determine the biochemical difference between the quadruple mutant and each of the single mutants, the activity of the quadruple UNC-78 mutant was characterized in vitro. A sedimentation assay indicated that the 4X mutant and E126A had nearly no UNC-60B-dependent actin disassembly activity (Figure 4A), whereas D168A, F182A, and F192A showed weak disassembly activity (Figure 4A). In addition, the 4X mutant as well as E126A cosedimented with UNC-60B-bound actin filaments (Figure 4C). Thus, the sedimentation assay demonstrated that D168A, F182A, and F192A maintained reduced disassembly activity, but it failed to distinguish the difference between the 4X and E126A mutants. However, their activities were clearly different in the light scattering assay, in which E126A slowly decreased light scattering, whereas the 4X mutant drastically increased light scattering (Figure 4B). E126A binds to UNC-60B-bound actin filaments in a pelleting assay at a 1:2 M ratio (Mohri et al., 2004
) and could theoretically contribute to increasing the mass of the filaments. Nonetheless, the decrease in light scattering in the presence of E126A suggests that the filaments were shortened by severing. In contrast, the 4X mutant remains bound to the filaments resulting in the increase in light scattering due to filament bundling through dimerization of the GST moiety. The 4X mutant is most likely defective with the disassembly activity, but it is not conclusive because of its bundling effect. However, it would be reasonable to interpret that the clear difference between 4X and E126A in the light scattering assay (Figure 4B) indicates that E126A has stronger severing activity than 4X and that E126A-severed (and possibly bundled) filaments are short enough to decrease light scattering.
To further confirm these activities, actin filaments were incubated with UNC-60B and wild-type or mutant GST-UNC-78 and spun at different centrifugal forces (Figure 4C). At 140,000 x g, E126A, but not 4X, slightly increased the amount of actin in the supernatant (Figure 4C), indicating that short filaments were generated by E126A. In addition, the 4X mutant, but not wild-type or E126A, caused sedimentation of actin at low-speed centrifugation only in the presence of UNC-60B (Figure 4C), suggesting that actin bundles were formed by the 4X mutant, again, likely because of dimerization of the GST moiety. Wild-type or E126A may also bundle UNC-60B-bound actin filaments, but such bundles are probably too short to sediment at 18,000 x g. These biochemical results show that the simultaneous mutation of the four residues strongly impairs the filament disassembly activity but not the F-actin-binding activities.
unc-78 Mutations Identified through a Genetic Screen Impair Protein Folding or Filament Disassembly Activity
We previously identified three missense mutations (G304E, G346E, and H535Y) and one nonsense mutation (W607-stop) (Ono, 2001
) from mutant unc-78 alleles that cause uncoordinated movement and defects in the actin organization in body wall muscle (Waterston et al., 1980
; Zengel and Epstein, 1980
). Additionally, in this study, we identified a new missense mutation (G19E) from unc-78(su223) that was isolated by Zengel and Epstein (1980
). These residues are spatially distinct from the biochemically identified functional residues (Figure 5A). Therefore, they are strong candidates for new functional sites of UNC-78.
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To determine the effects of these mutations on the activity of UNC-78, mutant forms of GST-UNC-78 were bacterially expressed and tested for their activity in vitro. Three mutants (G304E, G346E, and W607-stop) were insoluble after expression in Escherichia coli (our unpublished data). In the crystal structure, G304 and G346 are not exposed on the surface (Figure 5B), and the premature stop codon at position 607 removes the C-terminal five amino acids that associate with the N terminus to conclude the
-propeller (Figure 5A), suggesting that these mutations altered protein folding and/or conformation. The G19E and H535Y mutants were expressed as soluble proteins and successfully purified for subsequent characterization. In sedimentation assays, these two mutants had much weaker activity to disassemble actin filaments in an UNC-60Bdependent manner than wild type (Figure 6). G19E exhibited weaker disassembly activity than H535Y (Figure 6). These mutants had similar activity on C. elegans actin (our unpublished data).
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2.5-fold (Figure 9). Wild-type GST-UNC-78 inhibited the elongation rate by capping the barbed ends (Figure 9) as reported previously for Xenopus laevis AIP1 (Okada et al., 2002| DISCUSSION |
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Null or loss-of-function phenotypes for AIP1 in several biological systems consistently indicate that AIP1 is required for cellular events that require dynamic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton, suggesting that AIP1 is a conserved enhancer of actin filament turnover (Ono, 2003
). This conserved function of AIP1 can be explained by its activity to promote disassembly of ADF/cofilin-bound actin filaments. ADF/cofilin by itself severs and depolymerizes actin filaments. However, filament severing by ADF/cofilin increases the number of exposed barbed ends that also enhance polymerization (Ichetovkin et al., 2002
; Ghosh et al., 2004
). AIP1 can promote actin depolymerization in the presence of ADF/cofilin by actively severing filaments (Ono et al., 2004
) and/or capping the barbed ends (Okada et al., 2002
; Balcer et al., 2003
). The disassembly and capping activities of UNC-78 can be uncoupled by point mutations in evolutionarily conserved residues, suggesting that they are separable activities (Mohri et al., 2004
). Both activities are most likely important for the function of AIP1. The 4X and G19E mutants caused very strong actin disorganization in muscle, whereas they showed different biochemical properties. The in vivo phenotypes of 4X and G19E cannot be directly compared because 4X was expressed as a GFP-fusion protein, whereas G19E was expressed endogenously as a nonfusion protein. We showed that GFP-UNC-78 is functional. However, because GFP can dimerize at high concentrations (Kd =
100 µM) (Phillips, 1997
), GFP-UNC-784X could form a dimer when it is locally concentrated in the actin aggregates and bundle actin filaments, which may worsen the phenotype as a secondary effect.
The 4X mutant had a severe disassembly defect and mildly affected capping activity, suggesting the functional significance of the disassembly activity of AIP1 in cytoskeletal reorganization. AIP1 is the only known protein that specifically disassembles ADF/cofilin-bound actin filaments. In contrast, there are a number of barbed end capping proteins in the cell (Weeds and Maciver, 1993
; Zigmond, 2004
). Thus, the ADF/cofilin-dependent filament disassembly activity may be the unique function of AIP1, but the capping activity could be compensated by other capping proteins within the cell. In support of this idea, in yeast, an aip1-null mutant shows synthetic growth defects in combination with null alleles for capping protein (cap1 and cap2) (Rodal et al., 1999
). In contrast, G19E showed a severe capping defect and moderate disassembly activity that is comparable with other functional UNC-78 mutants, suggesting that capping is also an important function. We measured the capping activity by an actin elongation assay to quantify relative numbers of exposed barbed ends. However, the data from this assay contained relatively large deviations, and it is still possible that G19E may have significant capping activity. The relative elongation rate can be reduced when the barbed end is capped or when some filaments are completely disassembled. Although these two phenomena cannot be distinguished in this assay, our results likely represent capping because E126A, which does not increase unpelletable actin in the pelleting assays, shows similar activity to wild type. An actin-pelleting assay in the presence of profilin was used to determine the capping activity of AIP1 (Balcer et al., 2003
). However, a recent study has shown that this assay may not accurately measure capping (Clark et al., 2006
), probably because depolymerization and severing cannot be distinguished by the pelleting assay. Therefore, more direct methods to determine the capping activity of AIP1 will be needed to understand the functional significance of this activity.
Biochemical analysis of additional mutations of UNC-78 support our previous observations that UNC-78/AIP1 actively disassembles ADF/cofilin-bound actin filaments (Ono et al., 2004
) and that the disassembly activity can be uncoupled from the capping activity (Mohri et al., 2004
). We found that a simultaneous mutation of four clustered residues is required to eliminate the disassembly activity, suggesting that this activity requires a relatively large surface area of the N-terminal propeller (Figure 6). The quadruple mutant was still capable of F-actin binding and capping, indicating that an actin-binding site exists in the other part of the molecule. G19E is the first mutant with impaired disassembly and capping activities, and this residue is a candidate for a part of a capping site. Gly-19 is also spatially close to the four residues responsible for disassembly and may also be a part of the disassembly site. However, a capping defect of G19E may indirectly affect the disassembly activity. Therefore, the capping site of UNC-78 remains elusive because we have not found any "capping-specific" mutant. In addition, we found that the H535Y mutant caused a defect in the disassembly activity. Although the defect is mild, this is the first functionally defective mutation in the C-terminal propeller, and His-535 is a candidate for a part of a second site responsible for disassembly. In agreement with our data, functional surface residues in the C-terminal propeller of yeast AIP1 have been identified (Clark et al., 2006
; Okada and Goode, personal communication). Thus, the C-terminal propeller of AIP1 is very likely to have important function for actin disassembly and/or capping, and further mutational analysis should reveal the mechanism by which AIP1 induces ADF/cofilin-dependent actin disassembly.
Our results demonstrate that morphogenesis of striated myofibrils requires actin filament disassembly by UNC-78 (AIP1) and UNC-60B (ADF/cofilin). Previous studies indicate that UNC-60B is required for organized assembly of actin filaments into the myofibrils (Ono et al., 1999
, 2003
). UNC-60B by itself enhances filament severing and pointed end depolymerization with only minor effects on the steady-state concentrations of G- and F-actin (Ono and Benian, 1998
; Yamashiro et al., 2005
). UNC-78 has activity to promote depolymerization and severing (Mohri and Ono, 2003
; Ono et al., 2004
) to facilitate remodeling of the actin filaments. This study strongly suggests that enhancement of UNC-60Bdependent filament disassembly is the critical and unique function of UNC-78. The mechanism of this function of UNC-78 remains elusive as to whether the enhancement of disassembly is caused by severing or capping, and further biochemical and mutagenesis studies of AIP1 are needed to solve this problem. In muscle cells, the expression of actin is substantially up-regulated during myogenesis and the concentration of actin is very high. This may be the reason why muscle cells require a strong actin disassembly system by ADF/cofilin and AIP1 to achieve assembly of organized myofibrils. In mammalian muscle, a muscle-specific cofilin isoform is expressed (Ono et al., 1994
; Thirion et al., 2001
; Vartiainen et al., 2002
), but it is not known whether mammalian AIP1 (WDR1) (Adler et al., 1999
; Fujibuchi et al., 2005
) is expressed in muscle. In contrast, cells have to have a system to inhibit the strong activity of ADF/cofilin and AIP1 to maintain the contractile structures. Tropomyosin inhibits ADF/cofilin-dependent actin dynamics in C. elegans body wall muscle (Ono and Ono, 2002
) and is a strong candidate for such an inhibitor. However, no direct regulator of the AIP1 activity is currently known. Further studies on actin dynamics in the C. elegans muscle cells may reveal additional regulatory factors that are linked to the functions of ADF/cofilin and AIP1.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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Abbreviations used: ADF, actin-depolymerizing factor; AIP1, actin-interacting protein 1; GFP, green fluorescent protein: GST, glutathione S-transferase.
The online version of this article contains supplemental material at MBC Online (http://www.molbiolcell.org). ![]()
* Present address: Department of Biophysics, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan. ![]()
Address correspondence to: Shoichiro Ono (sono{at}emory.edu).
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