During inflammation, hydrogen peroxide, produced by polymorphonuclear leukocytes, provokes cell death mainly by disarranging filamentous (polymerized) actin (F-actin). To show the molecular mechanism(s) by which hydrogen peroxide could alter actin dynamics, we analyzed the ability of H2O2-treated actin samples to polymerize as well as the suitability of actin polymers (from oxidized monomers) to interact with cross-linking proteins. H2O2-treated monomeric (globular) actin (G-actin) shows an altered time course of polymerization. The increase in the lag phase and the lowering in both the polymerization rate and the polymerization extent have been evidenced, furthermore, steady-state actin polymers, from oxidized monomers, are more fragmented than control polymers. This seems to be ascribable to the enhanced fragility of oxidized filaments rather than to the increase in the nucleation activity, which markedly falls. These facts, along with the unsuitability of actin polymers from oxidized monomers to interact with both filamin and rr-actinin, suggest that hydrogen peroxide influences actin dynamics mainly by changing the F-actin structure. H2O2, via the oxidation of actin thiols (in particular, the sulfhydryl group of Cys-374), likely alters the actin C-terminus, influencing both subunit/subunit interactions and the spatial structure of the binding sites for cross-linking proteins in F-actin. We suggest that most of the effects of hydrogen peroxide on actin could be explained in the light of the ''structural connectivity,'' demonstrated previously in actin.

H2O2-treated actin: assembly and polymer interactions with cross- linking proteins / I. Dalle Donne, A. Milzani, R. Colombo. - In: BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL. - ISSN 1542-0086. - 69:6(1995), pp. 2710-2719.

H2O2-treated actin: assembly and polymer interactions with cross- linking proteins

I. Dalle Donne
Primo
;
A. Milzani
Secondo
;
1995

Abstract

During inflammation, hydrogen peroxide, produced by polymorphonuclear leukocytes, provokes cell death mainly by disarranging filamentous (polymerized) actin (F-actin). To show the molecular mechanism(s) by which hydrogen peroxide could alter actin dynamics, we analyzed the ability of H2O2-treated actin samples to polymerize as well as the suitability of actin polymers (from oxidized monomers) to interact with cross-linking proteins. H2O2-treated monomeric (globular) actin (G-actin) shows an altered time course of polymerization. The increase in the lag phase and the lowering in both the polymerization rate and the polymerization extent have been evidenced, furthermore, steady-state actin polymers, from oxidized monomers, are more fragmented than control polymers. This seems to be ascribable to the enhanced fragility of oxidized filaments rather than to the increase in the nucleation activity, which markedly falls. These facts, along with the unsuitability of actin polymers from oxidized monomers to interact with both filamin and rr-actinin, suggest that hydrogen peroxide influences actin dynamics mainly by changing the F-actin structure. H2O2, via the oxidation of actin thiols (in particular, the sulfhydryl group of Cys-374), likely alters the actin C-terminus, influencing both subunit/subunit interactions and the spatial structure of the binding sites for cross-linking proteins in F-actin. We suggest that most of the effects of hydrogen peroxide on actin could be explained in the light of the ''structural connectivity,'' demonstrated previously in actin.
cellular oxidant injury; rabbit skeletal-muscle; C-terminal residues; hydrogen-peroxide; F-actin; endothelial-cells; oxygen radicals; bleb formation; cytochalasin-D; alpha-actinin
Settore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata e Citologia
1995
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/451215
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