37 research outputs found
SPIN90 associates with mDia1 and the Arp2/3 complex to regulate cortical actin organization
Cell shape is controlled by the submembranous cortex, an actomyosin network mainly generated by two actin nucleators: the Arp2/3 complex and the formin mDia1. Changes in relative nucleator activity may alter cortical organization, mechanics and cell shape. Here we investigate how nucleation-promoting factors mediate interactions between nucleators. In vitro, the nucleation-promoting factor SPIN90 promotes formation of unbranched filaments by Arp2/3, a process thought to provide the initial filament for generation of dendritic networks. Paradoxically, in cells, SPIN90 appears to favour a formin-dominated cortex. Our in vitro experiments reveal that this feature stems mainly from two mechanisms: efficient recruitment of mDia1 to SPIN90-Arp2/3 nucleated filaments and formation of a ternary SPIN90-Arp2/3-mDia1 complex that greatly enhances filament nucleation. Both mechanisms yield rapidly elongating filaments with mDia1 at their barbed ends and SPIN90-Arp2/3 at their pointed ends. Thus, in networks, SPIN90 lowers branching densities and increases the proportion of long filaments elongated by mDia1
Self-Consistent Field study of Polyelectrolyte Brushes
We formulate a self-consistent field theory for polyelectrolyte brushes in
the presence of counterions. We numerically solve the self-consistent field
equations and study the monomer density profile, the distribution of
counterions, and the total charge distribution. We study the scaling relations
for the brush height and compare them to the prediction of other theories. We
find a weak dependence of the brush height on the grafting density.We fit the
counterion distribution outside the brush by the Gouy-Chapman solution for a
virtual charged wall. We calculate the amount of counterions outside the brush
and find that it saturates as the charge of the polyelectrolytes increases
Individual Actin Filaments in a Microfluidic Flow Reveal the Mechanism of ATP Hydrolysis and Give Insight Into the Properties of Profilin
A novel microfluidic approach allows the analysis of the dynamics of individual actin filaments, revealing both their local ADP/ADP-Pi-actin composition and that Pi release is a random mechanism