ATP-dependent Membrane Assembly of F-Actin Facilitates Membrane Fusion

Author:

Jahraus Andrea1,Egeberg Morten1,Hinner Bernhard2,Habermann Anja1,Sackman Erich2,Pralle Arnd1,Faulstich Heinz3,Rybin Vladimir1,Defacque Hélène1,Griffiths Gareth1

Affiliation:

1. European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Heidelberg, Germany;

2. Physik Department E22 Technische Universität München, James Franck Strasse, 85747 Garching, Germany;

3. Max-Planck-Institut für Medizinische Forschung c/o Max-Planck-Institut für Zell Biologie, Ladenburg, Germany

Abstract

We recently established an in vitro assay that monitors the fusion between latex-bead phagosomes and endocytic organelles in the presence of J774 macrophage cytosol ( Jahraus et al., 1998 ). Here, we show that different reagents affecting the actin cytoskeleton can either inhibit or stimulate this fusion process. Because the membranes of purified phagosomes can assemble F-actin de novo from pure actin with ATP ( Defacque et al., 2000a ), we focused here on the ability of membranes to nucleate actin in the presence of J774 cytosolic extracts. For this, we used F-actin sedimentation, pyrene actin assays, and torsional rheometry, a biophysical approach that could provide kinetic information on actin polymerization and gel formation. We make two major conclusions. First, under our standard in vitro conditions (4 mg/ml cytosol and 1 mM ATP), the presence of membranes actively catalyzed the assembly of cytosolic F-actin, which assembled into highly viscoelastic gels. A model is discussed that links these results to how the actin may facilitate fusion. Second, cytosolic actin paradoxically polymerized more under ATP depletion than under high-ATP conditions, even in the absence of membranes; we discuss these data in the context of the well described, large increases in F-actin seen in many cells during ischemia.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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