Role of Nucleotide Exchange and Hydrolysis in the Function of Profilin in Actin Assembly
Abstract
Profilin, an essential G-actin-binding protein, has two opposite regulatory functions in actin filament assembly. It facilitates
assembly at the barbed ends by lowering the critical concentration (Pantaloni, D., and Carlier, M.-F.(1993) Cell 75, 1007-1014); in contrast it contributes to the pool of unassembled actin when barbed ends are capped. We proposed that
the first of these functions required an input of energy. How profilin uses the ATP hydrolysis that accompanies actin polymerization
and whether the acceleration of nucleotide exchange on G-actin by profilin participates in its function in filament assembly
are the issues addressed here. We show that 1) profilin increases the treadmilling rate of actin filaments in the presence
of Mg
ions; 2) when filaments are assembled from CaATP-actin, which polymerizes in a quasireversible fashion, profilin does not
promote assembly at the barbed ends and has only a G-actin-sequestering function; 3) plant profilins do not accelerate nucleotide
exchange on G-actin, yet they promote assembly at the barbed end. The enhancement of nucleotide exchange by profilin is therefore
not involved in its promotion of actin assembly, and the productive growth of filaments from profilin-actin complex requires
the coupling of ATP hydrolysis to profilin-actin assembly, a condition fulfilled by Mg-actin, and not by Ca-actin.
Footnotes
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- Received January 31, 1996.
- Revision received March 18, 1996.
- © 1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











