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Non-muscle myosin 2 can incorporate into established filaments in cells without an assembly competence domain.

Kehan WuHiral PatelHuini WuMelissa A QuintanillaMargaret A BennettStefano SalaJordan R Beach
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Myosin 2 dynamically assembles into filaments that exert force on the actin cytoskeleton. To form filaments, myosin 2 monomers transition between folded and unfolded states. Monomer unfolding exposes an extended coiled-coil that interacts with other monomers in parallel and antiparallel fashions, enabling bipolar filament formation. A C-terminal domain of the coiled-coil, termed assembly competence domain (ACD), has been repeatedly identified as necessary for filament assembly. Here, we revisit ACD contribution when full-length filaments are present. Non-muscle myosin 2A lacking the ACD (ΔACD) initially appears diffuse, but triton extraction of cytosolic fraction reveals cytoskeletal association. Disruption of the folded monomer enhances the cytoskeletal fraction, while inhibition of endogenous filament assembly appears to reduce it. Finally, high resolution imaging of endogenous and exogenous bipolar filamentous structures reveals highly coincident signal, suggesting ΔACD constructs co-assemble with endogenous myosin 2A filaments. Our data demonstrate that while the ACD is required for de novo filament assembly, it is not required for monomers to recognize and associate with established filaments in cells. More broadly, this highlights the existence of distinct mechanisms governing myosin 2 monomer assembly into nascent filaments, and monomer recognition and association with established filaments to maintain steady-state contractile networks.
Keyphrases
  • binding protein
  • high resolution
  • induced apoptosis
  • skeletal muscle
  • molecularly imprinted
  • cell cycle arrest
  • bipolar disorder
  • oxidative stress
  • electronic health record
  • endoplasmic reticulum