Latrunculin alters the actin-monomer subunit interface to prevent polymerization
View/Open
Date
06/2000Author
Morton, Walter M
Ayscough, Kathryn R
McLaughlin, Paul J
Metadata
Abstract
Latrunculin-A is a drug that is capable of rapidly, reversibly and
specifically disrupting the actin cytoskeleton. The efficacy of its
action has made it a compound of choice in many cell-biology
laboratories, supplanting the classic actin-depolymerizing drug
cytochalasin-D. One reason for this is that the mode of action of
latrunculin seems to be less complex than that of cytochalasin.
Whereas the latter affects the kinetics of actin-filament polymerization
at both the barbed and pointed ends, latrunculin-A seems to
associate only with actin monomers, thereby preventing them from
repolymerizing into filaments. The association of latrunculin with
monomeric, rather than filamentous, actin gave us the opportunity
to further our understanding of this interaction by detailed structural
analysis of actin monomers using crystallographic techniques.
Here we show the first high-resolution structure of an actin-disrupting
drug in association with actin and discuss how its interactions
with actin, and the conformational changes that its binding
causes, may explain its mode of action within the
cell.