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Author Notes:

Correspondence: Shashank Shekhar, shekhar@emory.edu

Acknowledgements: We are grateful to Pekka Lappalainen for generously sharing CAP plasmids. We thank Shoichiro Ono, Ankita and Heidi Ulrichs for critical reading of the manuscript and for valuable feedback. We thank all Shekhar lab members, and especially Heidi Ulrichs, for help with protein purification.

Competing interests: We declare no conflicts of interest.

Subjects:

Research Funding:

This work was supported by NIH NIGMS grant R35GM143050 to S.S. and startup funds from Emory University to S.S.

Keywords:

  • Cyclase-associated protein (CAP)
  • actin depolymerization
  • processive depolymerase
  • formin
  • capping protein

Cyclase-associated protein is a pro-formin anti-capping processive depolymerase of actin barbed and pointed ends

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Journal Title:

bioRxiv

Publisher:

, Pages 569482-None

Type of Work:

Article | Preprint: Prior to Peer Review

Abstract:

Cellular actin networks display distinct assembly and disassembly dynamics resulting from multicomponent reactions occurring primarily at the two ends and the sides of actin filaments [1–3]. While barbed ends are considered the hotspot of actin assembly [4], disassembly is thought to primarily occur via reactions on filament sides and pointed ends [3, 5–11]. Cyclase-associated protein (CAP) has emerged as the main protagonist of actin disassembly and remodeling – it collaborates with cofilin to increase pointed-end depolymerization by 300-fold [6, 7], promotes filament “coalescence” in presence of Abp1 [12], and accelerates nucleotide exchange to regenerate monomers for new rounds of assembly [13–15]. CAP has also been reported to enhance cofilin-mediated severing [16, 17], but these claims have since been challenged [7]. Using microfluidics-assisted three-color single-molecule imaging, we now reveal that CAP also has important functions at filament barbed ends. We reveal that CAP is a processive barbed-end depolymerase capable of tracking both ends of the filament. Each CAP binding event leads to removal of about 5,175 and 620 subunits from the barbed and pointed ends respectively. We find that the WH2 domain is essential, and the CARP domain is dispensable for barbed-end depolymerization. We show that CAP co-localizes with barbed-end bound formin and capping protein, in the process increasing residence time of formin by 10-fold and promoting dissociation of CP by 4-fold. Our barbed-end observations combined with previously reported activities of CAP at pointed ends and sides, firmly establish CAP as a key player in actin dynamics.

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This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
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