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Myo10 tail is crucial for promoting long filopodia

Authors :
Chen, Xingxiang
Arciola, Jeffrey M.
Lee, Young Il
Wong, Pak Hung Philip
Yin, Haoran
Tao, Quanqing
Jin, Yuqi
Qin, Xianan
Sweeney, H Lee
Park, Hyo Keun
Chen, Xingxiang
Arciola, Jeffrey M.
Lee, Young Il
Wong, Pak Hung Philip
Yin, Haoran
Tao, Quanqing
Jin, Yuqi
Qin, Xianan
Sweeney, H Lee
Park, Hyo Keun
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Filopodia are slender cellular protrusions containing parallel actin bundles and are involved in environmental sensing and signaling, cell adhesion and migration, and growth cone guidance and extension. Myosin 10 (Myo10), an unconventional actin-based motor protein, was reported to induce filopodial initiation with its motor domain. However, the roles of the multifunctional tail domain of Myo10 in filopodial formation and elongation remain elusive. Herein, we generated several constructs of Myo10 – full-length (FL) Myo10, Myo10 with a truncated tail (Myo10 HMM) and Myo10 containing four mutations to disrupt its coiled-coil domain (Myo10 CC mutant). We found that the truncation of the tail domain decreased filopodial formation and filopodial length, while four mutations in the coiled-coil domain disrupted the motion of Myo10 toward filopodial tips and the elongation of filopodia. Furthermore, we found that filopodia elongated through multiple elongation cycles, which was supported by the Myo10 tail. These findings suggest that Myo10 tail is crucial for promoting long filopodia.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1422562321
Document Type :
Electronic Resource