4.5 Article

Phosphorylation of the cytoskeletal protein CAP1 controls its association with cofilin and actin

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 127, Issue 23, Pages 5052-5065

Publisher

COMPANY OF BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.156059

Keywords

Actin dynamics; Actin cytoskeleton; Kinase; Cell signaling; Cell migration

Categories

Funding

  1. Arkansas Biosciences Institute
  2. Institutional Development Award (IDeA) from the NIGMS of the National Institutes of Health [P20GM103429-12]
  3. Arkansas Breast Cancer Research Program
  4. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Translational Research Institute [CSTA] [UL1TR000039]
  5. National Institutes of Health [R01 GM48241]

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Cell signaling can control the dynamic balance between filamentous and monomeric actin by modulating actin regulatory proteins. One family of actin regulating proteins that controls actin dynamics comprises cyclase-associated proteins 1 and 2 (CAP1 and 2, respectively). However, cell signals that regulate CAPs remained unknown. We mapped phosphorylation sites on mouse CAP1 and found S307 and S309 to be regulatory sites. We further identified glycogen synthase kinase 3 as a kinase phosphorylating S309. The phosphomimetic mutant S307D/S309D lost binding to its partner cofilin and, when expressed in cells, caused accumulation of actin stress fibers similar to that in cells with reduced CAP expression. In contrast, the non-phosphorylatable S307A/S309A mutant showed drastically increased cofilin binding and reduced binding to actin. These results suggest that the phosphorylation serves to facilitate release of cofilin for a subsequent cycle of actin filament severing. Moreover, our results suggest that S307 and S309 function in tandem; neither the alterations in binding cofilin and/or actin, nor the defects in rescuing the phenotype of the enlarged cell size in CAP1 knockdown cells was observed in point mutants of either S307 or S309. In summary, we identify a novel regulatory mechanism of CAP1 through phosphorylation.

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