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. 1995 Feb 24;270(8):3463-6.
doi: 10.1074/jbc.270.8.3463.

Swinholide A is a microfilament disrupting marine toxin that stabilizes actin dimers and severs actin filaments

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Free article

Swinholide A is a microfilament disrupting marine toxin that stabilizes actin dimers and severs actin filaments

M R Bubb et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

Swinholide A, isolated from the marien sponge Theonella swinhoei, is a 44-carbon ring dimeric dilactone macrolide with a 2-fold axis of symmetry. Recent studies have elucidated its unusual structure and shown that it has potent cytotoxic activity. We now report that swinholide A disrupts the actin cytoskeleton of cells grown in culture, sequesters actin dimers in vitro in both polymerizing and non-polymerizing buffers with a binding stoichiometry of one swinholide A molecule per actin dimer, and rapidly severs F-actin in vitro with high cooperativity. These unique properties are sufficient to explain the cytotoxicity of swinholide A. They also suggest that swinholide A might be a model for studies of the mechanism of action of F-actin severing proteins and be therapeutically useful in conditions where filamentous actin contributes to pathologically high viscosities.

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