Actin Binding Protiens And Cell Motility Flashcards

1
Q

What is the cell cortex/ actin cortex

A

A network of actin on the inner face of the plasma membrane that can enable cells to:

crawl/move

Undergo phagocytosis

And constrict during cell division

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2
Q

What are actin binding protiens

A

They are protiens that bind to actin and regulate the assembly/disassembly and rearrangement of actin networks

This include more then 100 diff protiens

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3
Q

What are the 8 types of actin binding proteins

A

Filament nucleating

Monomer-sequestering

End blocking (capping)

Monomer polymerizing

Depolymerizing

Cross linking and bundling

Filament severing

Membrane binding

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4
Q

What are filament nucleating protiens

A

Filament nucleation (formation) of actin filament is slow so these protiens enhance the rate the they’re formed when a seed filament if present

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5
Q

What are the two categories of filament nucleating protiens

A

The ARP 2/3 complex

Formins

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6
Q

What does the ARP 2/3 complex do

A

It binds to the sides of an existing actin filament meaning it begins to create branches

It remains at the pointed end of the new branch and has a similar structure to actin monomers

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7
Q

What do formins do

A

They make UNBRANCHED filaments by staying accosiated with the barbed end of the actin filimants

They promotes fast ELONGATION of the the actin filaments

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8
Q

What are monomer sequestering protiens

A

They bind to actin atp monomers and prevent them from being added to the growing actin filament

Basically hide them away from the actin filament

This means they can alter the levels of available monomers in certain regions and keep them in separate actin pools for use later

Ex thymosins

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9
Q

What are endblocking (capping) protiens

A

The regulate the length of the actin filaments by binding at either end (barbed or pointed, + or -)

If capped at the barbed end the pointed end gets degraded but if capping protien at the pointed end it doesn’t get degraded

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10
Q

What are monomer polymerizing protiens

A

They bind to actin monomers to promote the growth of actin filaments

They do this by promoting the replacement of adp with atp. Since the monomers only fall off the filament when they have adp.

If we quickly change it to atp the monomers that fall off the pointed end can quickly get added back into the barbed end

Ex. Profilin

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11
Q

What are depolymerizing protiens

A

They bind to actin adp at the pointed end to speed up their depolymerization (dissociation)

Ex. Cofilin

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12
Q

What are cross linking and bundling protiens

A

The have multiple acting binding sites that let them change the 3D organization of filaments

They can cause filament to be either parallel (bundled) or perpendicular (cross linked) to each other

Ex. Bundling: vilin and fimbrin

Cross linking : filamin

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13
Q

What are filament severing protiens

A

Break an existing actin filament in two

Ex. Gelsolin, cofilin

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14
Q

What are membrane binding protiens

A

They link actin filaments to the plasma membrane

This allows the plasma membrane to protrude outward (cell locomotion) or inward (phagocytosis)

Ex. Spectrin which connects actin to the red blood cell membrane

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15
Q

What does profilin do

A

Polymerizes actin monomers

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16
Q

What does cofilin do

A

Depolymerizes actin monomers

17
Q

What does arp 2/3 do

A

Makes branched filament on the actin filament

18
Q

What is the first step in cell motility

A
  1. The movement of the cell begins by a protrusion of the cell in the direction is wants to move

Called the lamellipodium

19
Q

What is the second step in cell motility

A

A part of the protrusion (lamellapodium) anchored to the surface that is moving on

20
Q

What is the 3rd step in cell motility

A

The bulk of the cell is pulled to the front while the parts connected to the surface stay in place

21
Q

What is the fourth step in cell motility

A

The adhesive contacts to the surface break and the trailing edge (tail) of the cell retracts

22
Q

What if the first few step in how the lamellipodium forms

A

First a stimulus is received at the cell surface

Then the arp 2/3 complex near the stimulation gets activated

The arp 2/3 binds to the side of an actin filament and the actin monomers bind to it to make a new branch

The polymerization of the new branch is promoted by profilin

23
Q

What are the last few step in how the lamellipodium forms

A

More new ARP 2/3 complexes bind to the side of actin filaments to make new branches

the old branches are capped at their barbed ends (where growth is happening) to make the filaments short and stable

The newer branches keep growing and pushed the membrane of the lamellipodium forward

The older capped filaments/ branches are disassembled on their pointed end which is enhanced by cofilin

24
Q

What are traction forces in relation to cell motility

A

When the cell grips the surface at adhesion pints in the membrane called focal adhesions

25
Q

What are focal adhesions in relation to cell motility

A

These are structures in the cell membrane where integrin protiens connect to the actin filaments

26
Q

What are integrin protiens in relation to cell motility

A

These are transmembrane protiens in the cell that mediate the interaction between the actin filaments in the cell and the surface outside the cell

They link the inside to the outside but are temporary, not always linked to one same spot

27
Q

What is at the rear of the lamellipodium and what does it do

A

Myosin

uses contraction forces to pull the bulk of the cell forward