Abstract
We used electron cryo-micrographs to reconstruct actin filaments with bound AMPPNP (β,γ-imidoadenosine 5’-triphosphate, an ATP analog), ADP-Pi (ADP with inorganic phosphate) or ADP to resolutions of 3.4 Å, 3.4 Å and 3.6 Å. Subunits in the three filaments have nearly identical backbone conformations, so assembly rather than ATP hydrolysis or phosphate dissociation is responsible for their flattened conformation in filaments. Polymerization increases the rate of ATP hydrolysis by changing the conformations of the three ATP phosphates and the side chains of Gln137 and His161 in the active site. Flattening also promotes interactions along both the long-pitch and short-pitch helices. In particular, conformational changes in subdomain 3 open up favorable interactions with the DNase-I binding loop in subdomain 2 of the adjacent subunit. Subunits at the barbed end of the filament are likely to be in this favorable conformation, while monomers are not. This difference explains why filaments grow faster at the barbed end than the pointed end. Loss of hydrogen bonds after phosphate dissociation may account for the greater flexibility of ADP-actin filaments.
Significance Statement Actin filaments comprise a major part of the cytoskeleton of eukaryotic cells and serve as tracks for myosin motor proteins. The filaments assemble from actin monomers with a bound ATP. After polymerization, actin rapidly hydrolyzes the bound ATP and slowly dissociates the γ-phosphate. ADP-actin filaments then disassemble to recycle the subunits. Understanding how actin filaments assemble, disassemble and interact with numerous regulatory proteins depends on knowing the structure of the filament. High quality structures of ADP-actin filaments were available, but not of filaments with bound ATP- or with ADP and phosphate. We determined structures of actin filaments with bound AMPPNP (a slowly hydrolyzed ATP analog), ADP and phosphate and ADP by cryo-electron microscopy. These structures show how conformational changes during actin assembly promote ATP hydrolysis and faster growth at one end of the filament than the other.