Biology Open (Oct 2016)

Refilins are short-lived Actin-bundling proteins that regulate lamellipodium protrusion dynamics

  • Olivia Gay,
  • Benoît Gilquin,
  • Nicole Assard,
  • Pascal Stuelsatz,
  • Christian Delphin,
  • Joël Lachuer,
  • Xavier Gidrol,
  • Jacques Baudier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1242/bio.019588
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 10
pp. 1351 – 1361

Abstract

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Refilins (RefilinA and RefilinB) are members of a novel family of Filamin binding proteins that function as molecular switches to conformationally alter the Actin filament network into bundles. We show here that Refilins are extremely labile proteins. An N-terminal PEST/DSG(X)2-4S motif mediates ubiquitin-independent rapid degradation. A second degradation signal is localized within the C-terminus. Only RefilinB is protected from rapid degradation by an auto-inhibitory domain that masks the PEST/DSG(X)2-4S motif. Dual regulation of RefilinA and RefilinB stability was confirmed in rat brain NG2 precursor cells (polydendrocyte). Using loss- and gain-of-function approaches we show that in these cells, and in U373MG cells, Refilins contribute to the dynamics of lamellipodium protrusion by catalysing Actin bundle formation within the lamella Actin network. These studies extend the Actin bundling function of the Refilin-Filamin complex to dynamic regulation of cell membrane remodelling.

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