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The ability to induce microtubule acetylation is a general feature of formin proteins

Cytoplasmic microtubules exist as distinct dynamic and stable populations within the cell. Stable microtubules direct and maintain cell polarity and it is thought that their stabilization is dependent on coordinative organization between the microtubule network and the actin cytoskeleton. A growing...

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Published in:PloS one 2012-10, Vol.7 (10), p.e48041-e48041
Main Authors: Thurston, Susan F, Kulacz, Wojciech A, Shaikh, Sahir, Lee, Jonathan M, Copeland, John W
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c758t-6ac3fe958c3e2dc5385c2fcef2c1010844274271029f35bc8f8baea602a110243
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description Cytoplasmic microtubules exist as distinct dynamic and stable populations within the cell. Stable microtubules direct and maintain cell polarity and it is thought that their stabilization is dependent on coordinative organization between the microtubule network and the actin cytoskeleton. A growing body of work suggests that some members of the formin family of actin remodeling proteins also regulate microtubule organization and stability. For example, we showed previously that expression of the novel formin INF1 is sufficient to induce microtubule stabilization and tubulin acetylation, but not tubulin detyrosination. An important issue with respect to the relationship between formins and microtubules is the determination of which formin domains mediate microtubule stabilization. INF1 has a distinct microtubule-binding domain at its C-terminus and the endogenous INF1 protein is associated with the microtubule network. Surprisingly, the INF1 microtubule-binding domain is not essential for INF1-induced microtubule acetylation. We show here that expression of the isolated FH1 + FH2 functional unit of INF1 is sufficient to induce microtubule acetylation independent of the INF1 microtubule-binding domain. It is not yet clear whether or not microtubule stabilization is a general property of all mammalian formins; therefore we expressed constitutively active derivatives of thirteen of the fifteen mammalian formin proteins in HeLa and NIH3T3 cells and measured their effects on stress fiber formation, MT organization and MT acetylation. We found that expression of the FH1 + FH2 unit of the majority of mammalian formins is sufficient to induce microtubule acetylation. Our results suggest that the regulation of microtubule acetylation is likely a general formin activity and that the FH2 should be thought of as a dual-function domain capable of regulating both actin and microtubule networks.
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subjects Acetates
Acetylation
Actin
Animals
Binding
Biochemistry
Biology
C-Terminus
Cell adhesion & migration
Cell division
Cytoskeleton
Fetal Proteins - genetics
Fetal Proteins - metabolism
Fluorescent Antibody Technique
HeLa Cells
Humans
Immunoblotting
Immunology
Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins - genetics
Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins - metabolism
Mammals
Medicine
Mice
Microfilament Proteins - genetics
Microfilament Proteins - metabolism
Microtubules
Microtubules - metabolism
Muscle proteins
NIH 3T3 Cells
Nuclear Proteins - genetics
Nuclear Proteins - metabolism
Polarity
Polymerization
Proteins
Proteins - genetics
Proteins - metabolism
Psychological stress
Stabilization
Stress Fibers - metabolism
Transfection
Tubulin
title The ability to induce microtubule acetylation is a general feature of formin proteins
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