摘要

Background: Yeast cells depend on Arp2/3 complex to assemble actin filaments at sites of endocytosis, but the source of the initial filaments required to activate Arp2/3 complex is not known. Results: We tested the proposal that cofilin severs actin filaments during endocytosis in fission yeast cells using a mutant cofilin defective in severing. We used quantitative fluorescence microscopy to track mGFP-tagged proteins, including early endocytic adaptor proteins, activators of Arp2/3 complex, and actin filaments. Consistent with the hypothesis, actin patches disassembled far more slowly in cells depending on severing-deficient cofilin than in wild-type cells. Even more interesting, actin patches assembled slowly in these cofilin mutant cells. Adaptor proteins End 4p and Pan1p accumulated and persisted at endocytic sites more than ten times longer than in wild-type cells, followed by slow but persistent recruitment of activators of Arp2/3 complex, including WASP and myosin-I. Mutations revealed that actin filament binding sites on adaptor proteins Pan1p and End 4p contribute to initiating actin polymerization in actin patches. Conclusions: We propose a "sever, diffuse, and trigger" model for the nucleation of actin filaments at sites of endocytosis, whereby cofilin generates actin filament fragments that diffuse through the cytoplasm, bind adaptor proteins at nascent sites of endocytosis, and serve as mother filaments to initiate the autocatalytic assembly of the branched actin filament network of each new patch. This hypothesis explains the source of the "mother filaments" that are absolutely required for Arp2/3 complex to nucleate actin polymerization.

  • 出版日期2013-7-8