Contribution of the LIM Domain and Nebulin-Repeats to the Interaction of Lasp-2 with Actin Filaments and Focal Adhesions
Author(s) -
Hiroyuki Nakagawa,
Hiroshi Suzuki,
Satoshi Machida,
Junko Suzuki,
Kazuyo Ohashi,
Mingyue Jin,
Shigeaki Miyamoto,
Asako G. Terasaki
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0007530
Subject(s) - filopodia , lamellipodium , lim domain , focal adhesion , nebulin , actin , microbiology and biotechnology , mdia1 , actin remodeling , actinin , actin remodeling of neurons , pseudopodia , biology , actin cytoskeleton , actin binding protein , cytoskeleton , chemistry , myocyte , biochemistry , sarcomere , cell , gene , signal transduction , zinc finger , titin , transcription factor
Lasp-2 binds to actin filaments and concentrates in the actin bundles of filopodia and lamellipodia in neural cells and focal adhesions in fibroblastic cells. Lasp-2 has three structural regions: a LIM domain, a nebulin-repeat region, and an SH3 domain; however, the region(s) responsible for its interactions with actin filaments and focal adhesions are still unclear. In this study, we revealed that the N-terminal fragment from the LIM domain to the first nebulin-repeat module (LIM-n1) retained actin-binding activity and showed a similar subcellular localization to full-length lasp-2 in neural cells. The LIM domain fragment did not interact with actin filaments or localize to actin filament bundles. In contrast, LIM-n1 showed a clear subcellular localization to filopodial actin bundles. Although truncation of the LIM domain caused the loss of F-actin binding activity and the accumulation of filopodial actin bundles, these truncated fragments localized to focal adhesions. These results suggest that lasp-2 interactions with actin filaments are mediated through the cooperation of the LIM domain and the first nebulin-repeat module in vitro and in vivo . Actin filament binding activity may be a major contributor to the subcellular localization of lasp-2 to filopodia but is not crucial for lasp-2 recruitment to focal adhesions.
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