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CKAP5 enables formation of persistent actin bundles templated by dynamically instable microtubules.

Authors :
Sabo, Jan
Dujava Zdimalova, Michaela
Slater, Paula G.
Dostal, Vojtech
Herynek, Stepan
Libusova, Lenka
Lowery, Laura A.
Braun, Marcus
Lansky, Zdenek
Source :
Current Biology. Jan2024, Vol. 34 Issue 2, p260-260. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cytoskeletal rearrangements and crosstalk between microtubules and actin filaments are vital for living organisms. Recently, an abundantly present microtubule polymerase, CKAP5 (XMAP215 homolog), has been reported to play a role in mediating crosstalk between microtubules and actin filaments in the neuronal growth cones. However, the molecular mechanism of this process is unknown. Here, we demonstrate, in a reconstituted system, that CKAP5 enables the formation of persistent actin bundles templated by dynamically instable microtubules. We explain the templating by the difference in CKAP5 binding to microtubules and actin filaments. Binding to the microtubule lattice with higher affinity, CKAP5 enables the formation of actin bundles exclusively on the microtubule lattice, at CKAP5 concentrations insufficient to support any actin bundling in the absence of microtubules. Strikingly, when the microtubules depolymerize, actin bundles prevail at the positions predetermined by the microtubules. We propose that the local abundance of available CKAP5-binding sites in actin bundles allows the retention of CKAP5, resulting in persisting actin bundles. In line with our observations, we found that reducing CKAP5 levels in vivo results in a decrease in actin-microtubule co-localization in growth cones and specifically decreases actin intensity at microtubule plus ends. This readily suggests a mechanism explaining how exploratory microtubules set the positions of actin bundles, for example, in cytoskeleton-rich neuronal growth cones. [Display omitted] • CKAP5 enables bundling of actin filaments • CKAP5-coated microtubules recruit actin filaments regardless of actin orientation • CKAP5 enables formation of persistent actin bundles on dynamic microtubules Sabo et al. explore novel functions of an abundant microtubule polymerase CKAP5 (known as chTOG, or XMAP215 from X. laevis). They show that CKAP5 bundles actin filaments, crosslinks actin filaments to microtubules regardless of actin polarity, and enables the formation of persistent actin bundles templated by dynamically instable microtubules. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09609822
Volume :
34
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Current Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174873169
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.11.031