Login / Signup

Actin maturation requires the ACTMAP/C19orf54 protease.

Peter HaahrRicardo A Galli CaroLisa G van den HengelOnno B BleijerveldJustina Kazokaitė-AdomaitienėJi-Ying SongLona J KroesePaul KrimpenfortMarijke P BaltissenMichiel VermeulenCoen A C OttenheijmThijn R Brummelkamp
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
Protein synthesis generally starts with a methionine that is removed during translation. However, cytoplasmic actin defies this rule because its synthesis involves noncanonical excision of the acetylated methionine by an unidentified enzyme after translation. Here, we identified C19orf54, named ACTMAP (actin maturation protease), as this enzyme. Its ablation resulted in viable mice in which the cytoskeleton was composed of immature actin molecules across all tissues. However, in skeletal muscle, the lengths of sarcomeric actin filaments were shorter, muscle function was decreased, and centralized nuclei, a common hallmark of myopathies, progressively accumulated. Thus, ACTMAP encodes the missing factor required for the synthesis of mature actin and regulates specific actin-dependent traits in vivo.
Keyphrases
  • cell migration
  • skeletal muscle
  • gene expression
  • heart failure
  • insulin resistance
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • adipose tissue
  • high fat diet induced