Artículo de revista
The conserved Pelado/ZSWIM8 protein regulates actin dynamics by promoting linear actin filament polymerization
Fecha
2022Registro en:
Life Science Alliance vol. 5 núm. 12 Art. e202201484 - 2022
10.26508/lsa.202201484
Autor
Molina Pelayo, Claudia Macarena
Olguín Aguilera, Patricio Alejandro
Mlodzik, Marek
Glavic Maurer, Álvaro Alberto
Institución
Resumen
Actin filament polymerization can be branched or linear, which
depends on the associated regulatory proteins. Competition for
actin monomers occurs between proteins that induce branched
or linear actin polymerization. Cell specialization requires the
regulation of actin filaments to allow the formation of cell
type–specific structures, like cuticular hairs in Drosophila, formed
by linear actin filaments. Here, we report the functional analysis
of CG34401/pelado, a gene encoding a SWIM domain–containing
protein, conserved throughout the animal kingdom, called
ZSWIM8 in mammals. Mutant pelado epithelial cells display actin
hair elongation defects. This phenotype is reversed by increasing
actin monomer levels or by either pushing linear actin polymerization
or reducing branched actin polymerization. Similarly,
in hemocytes, Pelado is essential to induce filopodia, a linear
actin-based structure. We further show that this function of
Pelado/ZSWIM8 is conserved in human cells, where Pelado inhibits
branched actin polymerization in a cell migration context.
In summary, our data indicate that the function of Pelado/ZSWIM8
in regulating actin cytoskeletal dynamics is conserved, favoring
linear actin polymerization at the expense of branched filaments.