Biphasic Effect of Profilin Impacts the Formin mDia1 Force-Sensing Mechanism in Actin Polymerization

Hiroaki Kubota, Makito Miyazaki*, Taisaku Ogawa, Togo Shimozawa, Kazuhiko Kinosita, Shin'ichi Ishiwata

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    30 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Formins are force-sensing proteins that regulate actin polymerization dynamics. Here, we applied stretching tension to individual actin filaments under the regulation of formin mDia1 to investigate the mechanical responses in actin polymerization dynamics. We found that the elongation of an actin filament was accelerated to a greater degree by stretching tension for ADP-G-actin than that for ATP-G-actin. An apparent decrease in the critical concentration of G-actin was observed, especially in ADP-G-actin. These results on two types of G-actin were reproduced by a simple kinetic model, assuming the rapid equilibrium between pre- and posttranslocated states of the formin homology domain two dimer. In addition, profilin concentration dramatically altered the force-dependent acceleration of actin filament elongation, which ranged from twofold to an all-or-none response. Even under conditions in which actin depolymerization occurred, applications of a several-piconewton stretching tension triggered rapid actin filament elongation. This extremely high force-sensing mechanism of mDia1 and profilin could be explained by the force-dependent coordination of the biphasic effect of profilin; i.e., an acceleration effect masked by a depolymerization effect became dominant under stretching tension, negating the latter to rapidly enhance the elongation rate. Our findings demonstrate that the biphasic effect of profilin is controlled by mechanical force, thus expanding the function of mDia1 as a mechanosensitive regulator of actin polymerization.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)461-471
    Number of pages11
    JournalBiophysical Journal
    Volume113
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2017 Jul 25

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Biophysics

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