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. 1984 Jun 25;259(12):7480-7.

Actin-gelsolin interactions. Evidence for two actin-binding sites

  • PMID: 6330060
Free article

Actin-gelsolin interactions. Evidence for two actin-binding sites

J Bryan et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

We have used a fluorescence enhancement of actin labeled with 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD-actin) to study the interactions between rabbit skeletal muscle G-actin and either purified platelet gelsolin or a 130-kDa binary complex of platelet actin and gelsolin that is stable in EGTA and can be purified from human platelets. We have delineated four binding reactions. The exchange of Mg2+ for Ca2+ on the divalent cation-binding site of NBD-actin gives a small fluorescence increase. Binding of monomeric NBD-actin to the binary complex results in a 2.5-fold increase in the emission at 530 nm in the presence of Ca2+ and a 2-fold increase in the presence of EGTA. Titration experiments show that, under nonpolymerizing conditions, one additional actin is bound to the 130-kDa species to form a ternary complex. This binding is Ca2+-sensitive. Purified gelsolin does not appear to bind to NBD-actin in the presence of EGTA, as determined by fluorescence enhancement, gel filtration, or sedimentation measurements, but the addition of Ca2+ promotes rapid binding with a 1.6-1.7-fold enhancement of the emission intensity. A comparison of the relative fluorescence yields/NBD-actin molecule for a binary complex of gelsolin and one NBD-actin, a ternary complex of gelsolin and two NBD-actin molecules, and a ternary complex with an unlabeled actin in the EGTA-stable site and an NBD-actin in the second site indicates that the first NBD-actin, in the EGTA-stable site, does not give a fluorescence increase on binding but the second one does. Finally, we have demonstrated that one molecule of 45Ca2+ is "trapped" when the binary complex is formed and cannot be removed by EGTA. A summary model for these reactions is presented that indicates the interaction between actin and gelsolin is not a freely reversible Ca2+-controlled reaction.

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