Exploring the Role of Neuropeptide PACAP in Cytoskeletal Function Using Spectroscopic Methods

Author:

Vékony Roland Gábor1,Tamás Andrea2,Lukács András1,Ujfalusi Zoltán1ORCID,Lőrinczy Dénes1,Takács-Kollár Veronika1,Bukovics Péter1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biophysics, Medical School, University of Pécs, 7624 Pécs, Hungary

2. Department of Anatomy, Medical School, University of Pécs, 7624 Pécs, Hungary

Abstract

The behavior and presence of actin-regulating proteins are characteristic of various clinical diseases. Changes in these proteins significantly impact the cytoskeletal and regenerative processes underlying pathological changes. Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP), a cytoprotective neuropeptide abundant in the nervous system and endocrine organs, plays a key role in neuron differentiation and migration by influencing actin. This study aims to elucidate the role of PACAP as an actin-regulating polypeptide, its effect on actin filament formation, and the underlying regulatory mechanisms. We examined PACAP27, PACAP38, and PACAP6-38, measuring their binding to actin monomers via fluorescence spectroscopy and steady-state anisotropy. Functional polymerization tests were used to track changes in fluorescent intensity over time. Unlike PACAP27, PACAP38 and PACAP6-38 significantly reduced the fluorescence emission of Alexa488-labeled actin monomers and increased their anisotropy, showing nearly identical dissociation equilibrium constants. PACAP27 showed weak binding to globular actin (G-actin), while PACAP38 and PACAP6-38 exhibited robust interactions. PACAP27 did not affect actin polymerization, but PACAP38 and PACAP6-38 accelerated actin incorporation kinetics. Fluorescence quenching experiments confirmed structural changes upon PACAP binding; however, all studied PACAP fragments exhibited the same effect. Our findings indicate that PACAP38 and PACAP6-38 strongly bind to G-actin and significantly influence actin polymerization. Further studies are needed to fully understand the biological significance of these interactions.

Funder

Hungarian Brain Research Program NAP 3.0

Thematic Excellence Program

Medical School at University of Pécs

NKFIH

University of Pécs

Publisher

MDPI AG

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