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Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Molecular Biology Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095 USA
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Emil Reisler, Tel.: 310-825-2668; Fax: 310-206-7286; E-mail: reisler{at}mbi.ucla.edu.
| ABSTRACT |
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-helix (L. R. Otterbein, P. Graceffa, and R. Dominguez, 2001, Science, 293:708711). Subsequently, questions were raised regarding the possible role of the TMR label on Cys374 in determining these aspects of G-actin structure. We show here that the susceptibility of D-loop on G-actin to subtilisin cleavage, and ATP/ADP-dependent changes in this cleavage, are not affected by TMR-labeling of actin. The TMR modification inhibits nucleotide exchange, but has no effect on DNase I binding and the fast phase of tryptic digestion of actin. These results show an absence of allosteric effects of TMR on subdomain 2, while confirming ATP/ADP-dependent changes in D-loop structure. In conjunction with similar results obtained on actin-gelsolin segment 1 complex, this works reveals the limitations of solution methods in probing the putative open and closed nucleotide cleft states of G-actin. | INTRODUCTION |
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25% increase in solvent accessibility of the bound nucleotide (Chik et al., 1996
Several approaches of solution biochemistry indirectly indicated that the transition from the ATP- to ADP-G-actin involves the opening of the nucleotide cleft on actin. Thus, significantly faster rates of ADP compared to ATP release, in both Ca2+ and Mg2+ states of G-actin (Kinosian et al., 1993
), suggest a more open conformation of the nucleotide cleft in ADP-G-actin. The binding of DNase I to the interface between subdomains 2 and 4 of actin favors a closed cleft conformation (Polzar et al., 1989
; Kabsch et al., 1990
). Therefore, lower affinity of DNase I to ADP-G-actin compared to ATP-G-actin (Schuler et al., 2000b
) correlates with the proposed states of the nucleotide cleft. In addition, the susceptibility of the cleft region of subdomain 2 (residues Arg62 and Lys68) to trypsin is higher in ADP-G-actin, suggesting a less protected, and apparently more open, conformation of this actin than that of ATP-G-actin (Strzelecka-Golaszewska et al., 1993
). In F-actin, electron microscopy reconstructions of filaments by Egelman's group (Belmont et al., 1999
) also suggested a more open conformation for ADP-F-actin than for ADP-BeFx-F-actin, which is recognized as a stable structural analog of ADP-Pior ATP-actin.
In view of these data, Sablin et al. (2002)
questioned the origin of the closed nucleotide cleft conformation in the recently published structure of TMR modified (on Cys374) ADP-G-actin (Otterbein et al., 2001
). These authors suggested that the closed conformation of the TMR-actin stems from label intercalation between subdomains 1 and 3. A similar mechanism was also suggested for the actin cleft closure by gelsolin-S1. To test this supposition, we compared the properties of TMR-labeled actin, unlabeled actin, and actin-gelsolin-S1 complex using several assays, believed to be sensitive to the nucleotide cleft conformation. These included the measurements of nucleotide exchange rates, collisional quenching of the bound nucleotide, affinity of actin to DNase I, and the proteolytic susceptibility of the subdomain 2 region to trypsin. Our results do not yield a uniform description of changes in the cleft state (open or closed) in TMR-actin and actin-gelsolin-S1 complex. Thus, it is possible that the above methods monitor local conformational changes, rather than reporting on the open-closed transitions of the cleft.
In the atomic structure of ADP-TMR-actin, the DNase I-binding loop is in an
-helical conformation (Otterbein et al., 2001
), in contrast to its disordered or ß-sheet conformation in several ATP-actin structures. It has been proposed that this
-helical structure of D-loop results from either allosteric changes due to TMR-labeling of Cys374 (Egelman, 2001
), or from actin contacts in the crystal (Sablin et al., 2002
). To test whether TMR modification of Cys374 or ADP bound in the nucleotide cleft are responsible for the observed conformational shifts within subdomain 2, we probed the conformation of the DNase I-binding loop on actin by subtilisin. We compared the digestions of unmodified and modified actins in the ADP and ATP states. We found that the TMR-labeling of actin did not result in any significant changes in the susceptibility of the DNase I-binding loop to digestion by subtilisin under different nucleotide-cation conditions. Our results suggest that the TMR probe does not change significantly the conformation of the DNase I-binding loop, at least in terms of its susceptibility to subtilisin, and does not prevent the conformational rearrangement of this loop by ATP and ADP.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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-ATP, and
-ADP were obtained from Molecular Probes (Junction City, OR). Subtilisin (Type VIII bacterial protease), diphenyl-carbamoyl chloride-treated trypsin, hexokinase, ATP, ADP phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, EGTA, and double-stranded DNA from calf thymus were purchased from Sigma Chemical (St. Louis, MO). DNase I was purchased from Worthington Biochemical (Lakewood, NJ). DTT and HEPES were from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany). PD-10 gel filtration columns were purchased from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech (Uppsala, Sweden). Millipore-filtered water and analytical grade reagents were used in all experiments.
Proteins
Actin from rabbit back muscle was prepared according to Spudich and Watt (1971)
. Recombinant human gelsolin-S1 was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified as described in Goldsmith et al. (2001)
. Protein concentrations were determined from their absorption by assuming A (1%) at 290 nm of 11.5 cm-1 for actin, and A (1%) at 280 nm of 14.3 cm-1 and 11.1 cm-1 for gelsolin-S1 and DNase I, respectively. Molecular masses were assumed to be 42.3 kDa for actin, 14.2 kDa for gelsolin-S1, and 31 kDa for DNase I.
Preparation of various forms of actin
Cys374 TMR modification of actin was performed according to the protocol of Otterbein et al. (2001)
, with minor modifications. Briefly, G-actin (79 mg/ml) was incubated for 1 h in the presence of 10 mM DTT. Actin was passed then two times through PD-10 columns to remove DTT and was incubated overnight with a two molar excess of TMR. The labeling reaction was stopped with 2 mM DTT. The unlabeled actin was removed from this preparation by polymerizing it with 2 mM MgCl2 (for 45 min, at room temperature) and pelleting at 150,000 x g. The TMR-labeled actin remaining in the supernatant was transferred to the G-buffer (0.2 mM ATP, 0.2 mM CaCl2, 1 mM DTT, and 5 mM HEPES/NaOH, pH 7.5) by passing it through a PD-10 column preequilibrated with this buffer. The labeled and unlabeled actin were stored in the G-buffer.
Mg-ADP-G-actin was prepared essentially as in Gershman et al. (1989)
, with slight modifications. Ca-ATP-G-actin was passed through a PD-10 gel filtration column equilibrated with 0.4 mM EGTA, 50 µM MgCl2, 0.5 mM ADP, 1 mM DTT, and 5 mM HEPES, pH 7.5. Actin was supplemented with 8 units/ml hexokinase and 1 mM D-glucose, and incubated at 4°C for 2 h to ensure complete nucleotide exchange in TMR-actin. Ca-ADP-G-actin was prepared from Ca-ADP-F-actin as previously described (Kinosian et al., 1993
). Mg-ATP- and Mg-ADP-G-actin with two and three residues truncated from the C-terminus were prepared as described before (Strzelecka-Golaszewska et al., 1995
).
Proteolytic digestions
All digestions of actin (5.0 µM) were carried out at 25°C; other conditions are specified in the figure legends. Aliquots were removed from reaction mixtures at the desired time points, and the digestions were terminated with either 2.0 mM PMSF or with 1 µM soybean trypsin inhibitor, for subtilisin and tryptic digestions, respectively. These reaction aliquots were analyzed by SDS-PAGE.
Fluorescence measurements
All fluorescence measurements were made in a PTI spectrofluorometer (Photon Technology Industries, South Brunswick, NJ). Measurements of
-ATP and
-ADP release and their quenching by nitromethane were performed with the excitation and emission wavelengths set at 350 nm and 412 nm, respectively.
Nucleotide release measurements
The rate of nucleotide exchange in G-actin was observed by monitoring the decay or rise in fluorescence upon release or binding of etheno-nucleotides (
-ATP and
-ADP) to actin at 20°C. Excess ATP was removed from monomeric actin by gel-filtration on a PD-10 column, after which the protein was supplemented with a 10- to 20-fold molar excess of the corresponding etheno-nucleotide. For
-ADP-actin preparations, 1 mM glucose and 8 units/ml hexokinase were added at this stage. After incubation for 1 h on ice, the actin was gel-filtrated on a PD-10 column for transfer into the G-buffer containing 10 µM of the desired etheno-nucleotide (instead of ATP). The release of nucleotides from the nucleotide-binding cleft on actin was monitored after addition of 20-fold molar excess of ATP over etheno-nucleotide in G-actin, or after addition of a 20-fold excess of
-ATP to ATP- and ADP-G-actin.
Collisional quenching measurements
-ATP and
-ADP actins used in collisional quenching experiments were prepared in the same way as for the nucleotide exchange experiments, except that the final buffer did not contain any free nucleotide. To avoid nitromethane-induced oligomerization of Mg-
-ATP-actin and prevent leakage of
-ADP from actin, quenching experiments were performed with 10 µM actin at 10°C and were completed within 10 min from the beginning of the nitromethane titrations. The titrations were done in 10 mM increments, up to a final concentration of 100 mM nitromethane. No oligomers were produced under such conditions as confirmed by 1), rapid and complete etheno-nucleotide release from actin upon addition of a 20-fold molar ATP excess at the end of each titration; and 2), analytical ultracentrifugation of actin under similar conditions. The quenching data were analyzed by Stern-Volmer plots (Ando and Asai, 1980
).
Electrophoresis
SDS-PAGE on 10% gel slabs was performed according to Laemmli (1970)
. Gels with TMR-actin were visualized under UV light in Alpha-Imager (Alpha Innotech, San Leandro, CA) to reveal the TMR-label, and then stained with Coomassie blue R-250 to reveal the total protein. The stained gels were scanned in a Scan Premio ST scanner and quantified using the Sigma-Gel software (Jandel Scientific, Chicago, IL).
DNase I inhibition assay
The DNase I binding to actin was measured by DNase I inhibition assay as previously described (Schuler et al., 2000a
).
| RESULTS |
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-ATP and
-ADP fluorescence upon their binding, and a signal decrease upon their release from the nucleotide-binding site on actin.
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-ATP and k-ATP) compared to control actin in the Ca-ATP state, and about a twofold lower rate in the Mg-ATP state (Fig. 1; Table 1). The modification of actin by TMR slowed also about six- to sevenfold the nucleotide exchange rates in Mg-ADP-G-actin (Table 1).
It has been shown before that at relatively low concentrations of divalent cation the dissociation of nucleotide from G-actin is rate-limited by the dissociation of divalent cation from its high affinity site on actin (Kinosian et al., 1993
). When the divalent cation dissociates from actin, the affinity of actin for nucleotide is greatly reduced (Waechter and Engel, 1975
). At high concentrations of cations, the nucleotide dissociation apparently corresponds to that of the cation-nucleotide complex. Thus, the rate of nucleotide release from actin depends on the concentration of free Ca2+ or Mg2+ cation in solution. As expected, an increase in the free Ca2+ concentration resulted in a decrease in the nucleotide exchange rate (Fig. 1 A). Under these conditions, both the unlabeled and TMR-labeled actin exchange
-ATP at
10-fold slower rates than at low Ca2+ concentrations, but the ratio of their
-ATP exchange rates (kactin/kTMR-actin) remains
6.5 (Fig. 1 A; Table 1).
TMR-actin affinity to DNase I is similar to that of unlabeled actin
The affinity of G-actin to DNase I was shown to depend on the nucleotide and divalent cation bound to actin (Schuler et al., 2000b
), presumably correlating with the conformation of the nucleotide cleft. The affinity of these two proteins for each other can be measured by monitoring the inhibition of DNase I activity by actin (Schuler et al., 2000b
). We compared in this way the binding of TMR-actin and unlabeled actin to DNase I and found them to be very similar both in the Mg-ATP (Kd equal to 0.59 ± 0.07 and 0.67 ± 0.07 nM, respectively) and Mg-ADP G-actin (Kd = 1.68 ± 0.12 and 1.55 ± 0.11 nM, respectively).
Gelsolin-S1 abolishes ATP/ADP exchange for both Ca- and Mg-G-actin but does not affect the accessibility of the bound nucleotide to collisional quenchers
The N-terminal 14-kDa fragment of gelsolin (gelsolin-S1) binds to actin at the interface between subdomains 1 and 3 (McLaughlin et al., 1993
). It has been suggested that the intercalation of TMR group and gelsolin-S1 between subdomains 1 and 3 of actin may have a similar effect on the stabilization of the closed conformation of actin (Sablin et al., 2002
). Since opening the cleft by the clamshell-like mechanism (for review, see Schuler, 2001
) involves motions in the shear and hinge regions of actin, between subdomains 1 and 3, the above intercalation may restrain such an opening of the nucleotide cleft (Sablin et al., 2002
) and, consequently, inhibit the rate of nucleotide release. Indeed, it has been shown that the binding of gelsolin-S1 to G-actin abolishes
-ATP exchange in the presence of a Ca2+/Mg2+ cation mixture (Bryan, 1988
). Under these conditions, the high affinity cation binding site is occupied predominantly by Ca2+ (Kinosian et al., 1993
), whereas the physiologically relevant high affinity cation is Mg2+ (Kitazawa et al., 1982
). Thus, we reexamined here the effect of gelsolin-S1 on nucleotide exchange in other G-actin states. Under all conditions (Ca-ATP, Mg-ATP, and Mg-ADP), gelsolin-S1 effectively blocked the exchange of nucleotides (Fig. 2, Mg-ATP data are not shown). Therefore, our data suggest that gelsolin-S1 abolishes nucleotide exchange on actin, irrespective of its nucleotide-divalent cation state.
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-ATP by nitromethane was very similar for the two cation states of actin, yielding the Stern-Volmer coefficients Ksv = 1.37 ± 0.1 and 1.30 ± 0.15 for the Mg- and Ca-ATP-G-actin, respectively. In contrast to its strong inhibition of nucleotide release from actin, gelsolin-S1 had virtually no effect on the accessibility of
-ATP to this collisional quencher (Ksv = 1.45 ± 0.15 and 1.33 ± 0.06 M-1 for Ca- and Mg-
-ATP, respectively). Moreover, gelsolin-S1 had also no effect on the quenching of Mg-
-ADP on actin (Ksv = 2.2 ± 0.2 M-1).
TMR modification does not affect the digestion of actin by subtilisin
In the atomic structure of ADP-TMR-actin, the D-loop is in an
-helical conformation (Otterbein et al., 2001
), in contrast to its disordered or ß-sheet conformation in several ATP-actin structures. This difference between TMR-actin and other actin structures, if attributed to their different nucleotide states, correlates well with the observed protection of the D-loop in G-actin from subtilisin cleavage when ATP is replaced with ADP (Strzelecka-Golaszewska et al., 1993
). However, it has been proposed also that the
-helical D-loop structure results from allosteric changes due to TMR-labeling of Cys374 rather than from ADP substitution for ATP on G-actin (Egelman, 2001
). Such a possibility is indicated by the well-documented conformational coupling between subdomains 1 and 2 on actin (DalleDonne et al., 1999
; Strzelecka-Golaszewska et al., 1993
; Kuznetsova et al., 1996
; Kim and Reisler, 1996
, 2000
). To test whether TMR modification of Cys374 might be responsible for a change in D-loop structure, we used subtilisin cleavage as a conformation-sensitive probe of this loop, and compared the digestions of unmodified and modified actins in the ADP and ATP states.
Subtilisin digestions of TMR-modified and unmodified actin were monitored by SDS-PAGE (Fig. 3 A). The rates of actin cleavage were determined from the time-dependent decrease in the intensity of intact actin (upper band in Figs. 3 and 4), which in all cases followed a single exponential process (Fig. 3 B) and yielded the first-order rate constants. The digestions of unlabeled and TMR-labeled Ca-ATP-G-actin were very similar (Fig. 3), with the ratio of their corresponding cleavage rates kTMR/kControl = 0.92 ± 0.15 (n = 5). The replacement of Ca2+ with Mg2+ does not result in any significant changes in the subtilisin digestion of either TMR-actin (data not shown) or the unlabeled actin. The digestion rates of TMR-actin and control actin in the Mg-ADP state were also very similar (kTMR/kControl = 0.96 ± 0.11; n = 3); both rates were about threefold slower than the corresponding digestion rates of ATP-actin.
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Because tryptic cleavage at the C-terminus of actin (resulting in the release of residues 374375 or 373375) is faster than that within subdomain 2 (Mossakowska et al., 1993
; Strzelecka-Golaszewska et al., 1995
), we tested the possible link between these two cleavage reactions. Digestions of Cys374-AEDANS-labeled actin did not reveal any protection of the C-terminus by gelsolin-S1 (data not shown). In contrast, the TMR label at Cys374 impeded the tryptic digestion at the C-terminus. This can be seen from comparing the decay of the fluorescent and Coomassie blue stained actin bands in Fig. 4 A. The presence of the TMR label on intact actin and on its 33-kDa fragment (apparent molecular weight) throughout the entire digestion course shows that little, if any, C-terminal cleavage occurs in the labeled protein. Clearly, the tryptic cleavage in subdomain 2 of G-actin is not necessarily coupled to the C-terminal cleavage. Gelsolin-S1 activates the former but has no effect on the latter, whereas the TMR label inhibits the latter but has no effect on subdomain 2 digestion in Ca-ATP-G-actin.
Mg-G-actin digestions with trypsin do not follow a first-order process
In contrast to Ca-ATP-G-actin cleavage by trypsin, the digestions of Mg-ATP- and Mg-ADP-G-actin could not be described by a single exponential process (Figs. 5 and 6), revealing a greater complexity of these reactions. Curves showing the decay of intact actin were described well by a two-exponential rate expression (solid lines on Figs. 5 A and 6 A), but the reactions are probably more complex. In the presence of Mg2+ (ATP or ADP), TMR-modified actin and actin-gelsolin-S1 complex were more susceptible to tryptic attack than control actin. However, double-exponential fits of these tryptic digestions show virtually the same fast cleavage rates (k1) for the Ca-ATP- and Mg-ATP-G-actin states (TMR or gelsolin-S1; Table 2). The overall faster digestions of TMR-actin and gelsolin-S1-actin complex were due to shifts in the amplitudes of the two cleavage phases and some acceleration of the second, slow phase of the reaction. Notably, also, the rate constants of the fast reaction in Mg-ATP-G-actin were similar to the rate constants of the Ca-ATP-G-actin digestion (Table 2). The fast cleavage step was severalfold faster in Mg-ADP-G-actin and very similar to the digestion rate of Ca-ADP-G-actin (Table 2). These results reveal that TMR-labeling of actin or gelsolin-S1 binding, which are proposed to promote the closed cleft state of actin (Sablin et al., 2002
), do not produce the expected inhibition of Mg-ATP- and Mg-ADP-actin cleavage by trypsin. Instead, these reactions are accelerated by the increased rates of their slow phase component. This effect raises questions both about the possibility of allosteric effects on subdomain 2 due to Cys374 TMR-labeling and gelsolin-S1 binding, and/or the interpretation of the tryptic digestions of actin.
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12.5 µM (Attri et al., 1991Another potential source of actin heterogeneity might be its rapid C-terminal cleavage by trypsin, if such a truncation alters the cleavage rate of subdomain 2. This possibility was ruled out by preparing the C-terminally truncated actin (with the last two or three residues removed) and observing that the digestions of such Mg-G-actin and intact actin were indistinguishable.
The alternative possibility, that the kinetic complexity of Mg-G-actin digestions arises from trypsin inhibition in these reactions, has been tested in two ways. In the first experiment, a fresh aliquot of intact actin was added to the tryptic digestion reaction of actin that has proceeded for 30 min. Virtually no digestion of the new actin was observed in this case (Fig. 7), showing a strong inhibition of the initial activity of trypsin. In a second experiment, trypsin was incubated for 30 min in the Mg-G-actin buffer, at which point actin was added to this solution. Although the overall extent of actin digestion appeared to be reduced somewhat by such trypsin preincubation, the cleavage reaction showed a similar kinetic profile to that of control actin digestion (Fig. 7). These experiments suggest that trypsin is progressively inhibited by the products of actin degradation. Such degradation is notable, in particular, in Mg-G-actin, for which a stable 33- to 35-kDa fragment does not accumulate as seen in the tryptic digestions of Ca-G-actin (Fig. 4 B). The degradation of this fragment by trypsin (without the appearance of other stable, smaller intermediates) is demonstrated in the plot monitoring the percentage of intact actin (band) converted to the 33-kDa fragment (Figs. 5 B and 6 B).
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| DISCUSSION |
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The second and most intriguing aspect of the TMR-ADP-G-actin structure is the
-helical conformation of its D-loop, which has not been observed in prior ATP-G-actin structures. If this loop indeed undergoes a disorder to
-helix transition between the ATP and ADP states of actin, the finding of Otterbein et al. (2001)
would provide an elegant structural explanation for the ability of some actin-binding proteins to recognize the ATP and ADP actin states. However, the significance of the
-helical D-loop in TMR-ADP-G-actin has been questioned in recent publications. It has been suggested that this D-loop conformation may arise either from allosteric, long-range effects of TMR attachment to Cys374 or, alternatively, from the crystal packing contacts of the labeled actin (Sablin et al., 2002
; Egelman, 2001
).
The third, unexpected aspect of the TMR-ADP-G-actin structure is its closed nucleotide cleft conformation. Whereas all ATP-G-actin structures, with the exception of a single profilin-actin complex (Chik et al., 1996
), have been solved in the closed nucleotide cleft state, it has been expected that this cleft would be open in the ADP-G-actin structure. Thus, the closed cleft state in the TMR-ADP-G-actin was attributed recently to the probe blocking the opening of the cleft (Sablin et al., 2002
).
Because of the structural and functional importance of the last two aspects of TMR-ADP-G-actin structure, and in view of the questions raised about its interpretation, we examined here by solution methods the conformational states of TMR-G-actin and actin bound to gelsolin-S1.
The TMR modification does not affect nucleotide-induced conformational changes in the D-loop of actin
To test whether TMR modification might allosterically affect the conformation of the D-loop, we examined the subtilisin cleavage of labeled and unlabeled actin in their ATP and ADP states. Although the cleavage rates for ADP-actins were severalfold slower than those of ATP actins, we found no significant difference between the digestions of TMR-actin and unlabeled actin (Fig. 3). Similar to unlabeled actin cleavage (Strzelecka-Golaszewska et al., 1993
), subtilisin digestion of TMR-ATP-actin was not sensitive to the exchange of Ca2+ for Mg2+. Therefore, our data suggest that the TMR-probe does not change the conformation of the D-loop, at least in terms of its susceptibility to subtilisin cleavage, and, moreover, does not prevent the nucleotide-dependent rearrangement of this loop.
Although these results do not identify the nature of D-loop transition upon ATP to ADP switch in G-actin, they, as well as the original results of Strzelecka-Golaszewska et al. (1993)
, are consistent with the TMR-G-actin structure (Otterbein et al., 2001
). Any alternative interpretation of the D-loop structure in TMR-G-actin would still need to account for the different subtilisin cleavage of this loop in ATP- and ADP-G-actin.
The closed and open states of the nucleotide cleft in G-actin
To date, solution evidence linking the ATP- and ADP-G-actin to the closed and open nucleotide cleft states, respectively, has been indirect and open to alternative explanations. In general, the open actin conformation is believed to be associated with a faster nucleotide exchange, increased accessibility of etheno-nucleotides to collisional quenchers, increased susceptibility of Arg62 and Lys68 to trypsin, and a decreased DNase I binding. This is indeed observed for ADP-G-actin. Yet, it is possible that each of the above changes alone, but perhaps even collectively, might be caused by local conformational transitions, without an actual opening of the nucleotide cleft region. To test the predictive power of the solution approaches to probing the nucleotide cleft state in G-actin, we examined the G-actingelsolin-S1 complex. Whereas the expected closing of actin cleft (Sablin et al., 2002
) was indicated by the complete inhibition of
-ADP (and
-ATP) exchange by gelsolin-S1, this protein had no effect on the collisional quenching of
-ADP (and
-ATP) and the fast phase of tryptic cleavage of ADP- and ATP-G-actin. In the absence of these other changes, the inhibition of nucleotide exchange is insufficient to indicate a shift between the open and closed states of G-actin due to gelsolin-S1 binding.
Similarly, solution methods do not provide conclusive evidence for the proposed "closing" of the nucleotide cleft by TMR-labeling of actin (Sablin et al., 2002
). As in the case of gelsolin-S1, the inhibition of nucleotide exchange in TMR-actin (much smaller than in actingelsolin-S1) is not accompanied by other changes. Neither DNase I binding nor the fast phase of tryptic cleavage in subdomain 2 is altered by the TMR label. The lack of such changes strengthens the evidence discussed above against long-range allosteric effects of the TMR label on subdomain 2 in actin. It is more difficult to interpret these results in terms of the proposed cleft closure by TMR (Sablin et al., 2002
), albeit our data do not support such a possibility.
The inadequacy of the available solution methods for testing the actin cleft states is indicated also by prior observations on the actin-profilin complex. Although profilin accelerates nucleotide exchange on G-actin, which would be consistent with the nucleotide cleft opening, it has no effect on DNase I binding to actin (Schuler et al., 2000a
). The well-established faster release of ADP than ATP from G-actin does not necessarily show a more open conformation of ADP-actin. The
-phosphate in ATP has a number of additional electrostatic interactions with actin, as compared to ADP, which should result in slower nucleotide release. The same also may be true for Mg2+ versus Ca2+. These two cations are coordinated differently (octahedral versus heptacoordination (Vorobiev et al., 2003
)) and interact differently with actin (Kinosian et al., 1993
). These examples raise concerns that even in the case of collective changes observed upon ATP/ADP switch in G-actin, their interpretation in terms of nucleotide cleft closing and opening may not be fully justified. Intriguingly, the only conclusive structural evidence for a discrete open nucleotide cleft conformation of G-actin is that obtained from the atomic structure of the ATP-G-actinprofilin complex in the presence of a high phosphate concentration (Chik et al., 1996
). The crystal lattice trapping of two states of actin, with the open and closed nucleotide cleft, does not preclude the existence of more dynamic equilibria in solution.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This work was supported by grants from the U.S. Public Health Service (AR 22031) and National Science Foundation (MCB 9904599).
| FOOTNOTES |
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-ADP, 1,N,6-ethenoadenosine 5'-diphosphate;
-ATP, 1,N,6-ethenoadenosine 5'-triphosphate; gelsolin-S1, gelsolin segment 1; SDS-PAGE, sodium dodecylsulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; TMR, tetramethylrhodamine-5-maleimide. Submitted on April 24, 2003; accepted for publication June 10, 2003.
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