4.8 Article

Optimized filopodia formation requires myosin tail domain cooperation

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1901527116

Keywords

myosin; filopodia; actin; MyTH4-FERM

Funding

  1. CNRS
  2. Ligue Contre le Cancer [RS16]
  3. Initiatives of Excellence of Universite Paris Sciences et Lettres [LabexCelTisPhyBio:11-LBX-0038, ANR-10-IDEX-0001-02PSL]
  4. UMN's Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program
  5. UMN Medical Foundation
  6. UMN Graduate School
  7. American Heart Association
  8. NIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences [F31GM128325, R01GM122917]
  9. [ANR-17-CE11-0029-01]

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Filopodia are actin-filled protrusions employed by cells to interact with their environment. Filopodia formation in Amoebozoa and Metazoa requires the phylogenetically diverse MyTH4-FERM (MF) myosins DdMyo7 and Myo10, respectively. While Myo10 is known to form antiparallel dimers, DdMyo7 lacks a coiled-coil domain in its proximal tail region, raising the question of how such divergent motors perform the same function. Here, it is shown that the DdMyo7 lever arm plays a role in both autoinhibition and function while the proximal tail region can mediate weak dimerization, and is proposed to be working in cooperation with the C-terminal MF domain to promote partner-mediated dimerization. Additionally, a forced dimer of the DdMyo7 motor is found to weakly rescue filopodia formation, further highlighting the importance of the C-terminal MF domain. Thus, weak dimerization activity of the DdMyo7 proximal tail allows for sensitive regulation of myosin activity to prevent inappropriate activation of filopodia formation. The results reveal that the principles of MF myosin-based filopodia formation are conserved via divergent mechanisms for dimerization.

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