Arp2p, a potential substrate for NatB acetyltransferase in fission yeast, is important in actin patch nucleation and motility in arp2-1 and arm1 ts mutants


Autoria(s): Fleischer, Jackie
Data(s)

04/05/2007

04/05/2007

04/05/2007

Resumo

The actin cytoskeleton is a dynamic and complex structure in fission yeast that plays a major function in many cell processes including cellular growth, septa formation, endocytosis and cellular division. Computational studies have shown that Arp2p, which forms part of the Arp2/3 complex, is a potential substrate of NatB acetyltransferase which has specificity for proteins possessing an N-terminal Met-Asp or Met-Glu sequence motif. In arm1- mutants the loss of function of Arm1p, an auxillary subunit required for NatB activity, results in a temperature sensitive phenotype characterized by multiple septa, failure of endocytosis, and the inability to form actin cables. A temperature sensitive mutant of Schizosaccharomyces pombe arp2 gene exhibits a similar phenotype as seen by the formation of improper septa, slow growth, and the delocalization of actin patches. Four expression vectors encoding the open reading frames of arp2 and cdc8 (tropomyosin) were constructed with a modification changing the second residue to a Histidine, believed to mimic the charge distribution of natural acetylation by NatB. Constructs tested in normal yeast strains remained viable and grew normally in the presence of Met-His Arp2p and tropomyosin. Analysis of their ability to suppress the mutant phenotypes of arp2-1 and arm1- mutants is an area of research to be explored in future studies.

Formato

761344 bytes

application/msword

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/1974/410

Idioma(s)

en

Palavras-Chave #arp2, Actin, Acetyltransferase, arm1
Tipo

Thesis