Microfilament dynamics during cell movement and chemotaxis monitored using a GFP-actin fusion protein

Monika Westphal, Andreas Jungbluth, Manfred Heidecker, Bettina Mühlbauer, Christina Heizer, Jean Marc Schwartz, Gerard Marriott, Günther Gerisch

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background: The microfilament system in the cortex of highly motile cells, such as neutrophils and cells of the eukaryotic microorganism Dictyostelium discoideum, is subject to rapid re-organization, both spontaneously and in response to external signals. In particular, actin polymerization induced by a gradient of chemoattractant leads to local accumulation of filamentous actin and protrusion of a 'leading edge' of the cell in the direction of the gradient. In order to study the dynamics of actin in these processes, actin was tagged at its amine terminus with green fluorescent protein (GFP) and observed with fluorescence microscopy in living cells of D. discoideum. Results: Purified GFP-actin was capable of copolymerizing with actin. In the transfected cells of D. discoideum studied, GFP-actin made up 10-20% of the total actin. Microfilaments containing GFP-actin were capable of generating force with myosin in an in vitro assay. Observations of single living cells using fluorescence microscopy showed that the fusion protein was enriched in cell projections, including filopodia and leading edges, and that the fusion protein reflected the dynamics of the microfilament system in cells that were freely moving, being chemotactically stimulated, or aggregated. When confocal sections of fixed cells containing GFP-actin were labeled with fluorescent phalloidin, which binds only to filamentous actin, there was a correlation between the areas of GFP-actin and phalloidin fluorescence, but there were distinct sites in which GFP-actin was more prominent. Conclusions: Double labeling with GFP-actin and other probes provides an indication of the various states of actin in motile cells. A major portion of the actin assemblies visualized using GFP-actin are networks or bundles of filamentous actin. Other clusters of GFP-actin might represent stores of monomeric actin in the form of complexes with actin-sequestering proteins.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)176-183
    Number of pages7
    JournalCurrent Biology
    Volume7
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 1997

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