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Surface-induced polymerization of actin

Author(s)
Renault, ALenne, PFZakri, CAradian, AVenien-Bryan, CAmblard, F
Issued Date
1999-03
DOI
10.1016/S0006-3495(99)77317-0
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/31099
Fulltext
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0006349599773170?via%3Dihub
Citation
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, v.76, no.3, pp.1580 - 1590
Abstract
Living cells contain a very targe amount of membrane surface area, which potentially influences the direction, the kinetics, and the localization of biochemical reactions. This paper quantitatively evaluates the possibility that a lipid monolayer can adsorb actin from a nonpolymerizing solution, induce its polymerization, and form a 2D network of individual actin filaments in conditions that forbid bulk polymerization. G- and F-actin solutions were studied beneath saturated Langmuir monolayers containing phosphatidylcholine (PC, neutral) and stearylamine (SA, a positively charged surfactant) at PC:SA = 3:1 molar ratio. Ellipsometry, tensiometry, shear elastic measurements, electron microscopy, and dark-field tight microscopy were used to characterize the adsorption kinetics and the interfacial polymerization of actin. In all cases studied, actin follows a monoexponential reaction-limited adsorption with similar time constants (similar to 10(3) s). At a longer time scale the shear elasticity of the monomeric actin adsorbate increases only in the presence of lipids, to a 2D shear elastic modulus of mu approximate to 30 mN/m, indicating the formation of a structure coupled to the monolayer. Electron microscopy shows the formation of a 2D network of actin filaments at the PC:SA surface, and several arguments strongly suggest that this network is indeed causing the observed elasticity. Adsorption of F-actin to PC:SA leads more quickly to a silghtly more rigid interface with a modulus of mu approximate to 50 mN/m.
Publisher
BIOPHYSICAL SOCIETY
ISSN
0006-3495
Keyword
POSITIVELY CHARGED LIPOSOMESBINDING PROTEINSDYNAMICSNETWORKSPARACRYSTALSMONOLAYERSRESOLUTIONFILAMENTSMODULIMODEL

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