Publication | Open Access
A 40,000-dalton protein from Dictyostelium discoideum affects assembly properties of actin in a Ca2+-dependent manner.
120
Citations
20
References
1982
Year
Protein AssemblyMolecular BiologyCytoskeletonActin Assembly PropertiesDictyostelium DiscoideumProtein FoldingActin AssemblyCa2+-dependent MannerProteomicsMulti-protein AssemblyProtein ChemistryProtein FunctionBiochemistryNatural SciencesCell MotilityCellular StructureCellular Biochemistry40,000-Dalton ProteinMedicine
A 40,000-dalton protein that affects the assembly properties of actin in a Ca2+-dependent manner has been purified from Dictyostelium discoideum. Gel filtration chromatography indicates that the native form of this protein is a monomer. A major effect of this protein is to reduce the sedimentability of F-actin in a stoichiometric fashion. Nearly complete loss of sedimentability is observed at ratios of the 40,000-dalton protein to actin of greater than 1:10. At low stoichiometries, this protein can accelerate the rate of actin assembly under certain experimental conditions. These effects of the 40,000-dalton protein on the actin assembly properties described above require calcium ion. The 40,000-dalton protein does not exert its effects by proteolyzing actin. Furthermore, peptide maps demonstrate that this protein is not a proteolytic fragment of actin.
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