Tropomodulin caps the pointed ends of actin filaments.
Open Access
- 15 December 1994
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 127 (6) , 1627-1635
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.127.6.1627
Abstract
Many proteins have been shown to cap the fast growing (barbed) ends of actin filaments, but none have been shown to block elongation and depolymerization at the slow growing (pointed) filament ends. Tropomodulin is a tropomyosin-binding protein originally isolated from red blood cells that has been localized by immunofluorescence staining to a site at or near the pointed ends of skeletal muscle thin filaments (Fowler, V. M., M. A., Sussman, P. G. Miller, B. E. Flucher, and M. P. Daniels. 1993. J. Cell Biol. 120: 411-420). Our experiments demonstrate that tropomodulin in conjunction with tropomyosin is a pointed end capping protein: it completely blocks both elongation and depolymerization at the pointed ends of tropomyosin-containing actin filaments in concentrations stoichiometric to the concentration of filament ends (Kd < or = 1 nM). In the absence of tropomyosin, tropomodulin acts as a "leaky" cap, partially inhibiting elongation and depolymerization at the pointed filament ends (Kd for inhibition of elongation = 0.1-0.4 microM). Thus, tropomodulin can bind directly to actin at the pointed filament end. Tropomodulin also doubles the critical concentration at the pointed ends of pure actin filaments without affecting either the rate of extent of polymerization at the barbed filament ends, indicating that tropomodulin does not sequester actin monomers. Our experiments provide direct biochemical evidence that tropomodulin binds to both the terminal tropomyosin and actin molecules at the pointed filament end, and is the long sought-after pointed end capping protein. We propose that tropomodulin plays a role in maintaining the narrow length distributions of the stable, tropomyosin-containing actin filaments in striated muscle and in red blood cells.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tropomodulin is associated with the free (pointed) ends of the thin filaments in rat skeletal muscle.The Journal of cell biology, 1993
- Recent quantitative studies of actin filament turnover during cell locomotionCell Motility, 1993
- Mechanism of the insertion of actin monomers between the barbed ends of actin filaments and barbed end-bound insertinJournal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility, 1991
- ActinCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1990
- Tropomyosin inhibits the rate of actin polymerization by stabilizing actin filamentsBiochemistry, 1988
- Nucleation of actin polymerization by villin and elongation at subcritical monomer concentrationBiochemistry, 1987
- Actin filaments, stereocilia, and hair cells of the bird cochleaDevelopmental Biology, 1986
- Equilibrium of the actin-tropomyosin interactionJournal of Molecular Biology, 1979
- The role of spectrin in erythrocyte membrane-stimulated actin polymerisationNature, 1979
- Role of magnesium in the relaxation of myofibrilsBiochemistry, 1969