Mutant actins that stabilise F‐actin use distinct mechanisms to activate the SRF coactivator MAL

G Posern, F Miralles, S Guettler, R Treisman - The EMBO journal, 2004 - embopress.org
G Posern, F Miralles, S Guettler, R Treisman
The EMBO journal, 2004embopress.org
Nuclear accumulation of the serum response factor coactivator MAL/MKL1 is controlled by
its interaction with G‐actin, which results in its retention in the cytoplasm in cells with low
Rho activity. We previously identified actin mutants whose expression promotes MAL
nuclear accumulation via an unknown mechanism. Here, we show that actin interacts
directly with MAL in vitro with high affinity. We identify a further activating mutation, G15S,
which stabilises F‐actin, as do the activating actins S14C and V159N. The three mutants …
Nuclear accumulation of the serum response factor coactivator MAL/MKL1 is controlled by its interaction with G‐actin, which results in its retention in the cytoplasm in cells with low Rho activity. We previously identified actin mutants whose expression promotes MAL nuclear accumulation via an unknown mechanism. Here, we show that actin interacts directly with MAL in vitro with high affinity. We identify a further activating mutation, G15S, which stabilises F‐actin, as do the activating actins S14C and V159N. The three mutants share several biochemical properties, but can be distinguished by their ability to bind cofilin, ATP and MAL. MAL interaction with actin S14C is essentially undetectable, and that with actin V159N is weakened. In contrast, actin G15S interacts more strongly with MAL than the wild‐type protein. Strikingly, the nuclear accumulation of MAL induced by overexpression of actin S14C is substantially dependent on Rho activity and actin treadmilling, while that induced by actin G15S expression is not. We propose a model in which actin G15S acts directly to promote MAL nuclear entry.
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