Salactin, a dynamically unstable actin homolog in Haloarchaea.
Jenny ZhengJohn MallonAlex LammersTheopi RadosThomas LitschelEdmund R R MoodyDiego A Ramirez-DiazAmy K SchmidTom A WilliamsAlexandre W Bisson-FilhoEthan C GarnerPublished in: mBio (2023)
Protein filaments play important roles in many biological processes. We discovered an actin homolog in halophilic archaea, which we call Salactin. Just like the filaments that segregate DNA in eukaryotes, Salactin grows out of the cell poles towards the middle, and then quickly depolymerizes, a behavior known as dynamic instability. Furthermore, we see that Salactin affects the distribution of DNA in daughter cells when cells are grown in low-phosphate media, suggesting Salactin filaments might be involved in segregating DNA when the cell has only a few copies of the chromosome.