Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator

The actin cytoskeleton (AC) undergoes rapid remodelling to coordinate cellular processes during signal transduction, including changes in actin nucleation, crosslinking, and depolymerization in a time- and space-dependent manner. Switching the initial actin nucleation often provides timely control o...

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Main Authors: Ma, Zhiming, Zhu, Kexin, Gao, Yong-Gui, Tan, Suet-Mien, Miao, Yansong
Other Authors: School of Biological Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165405
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1654052023-03-27T01:36:47Z Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator Ma, Zhiming Zhu, Kexin Gao, Yong-Gui Tan, Suet-Mien Miao, Yansong School of Biological Sciences Institute for Digital Molecular Analytics and Science, NTU Science::Biological sciences Actin Remodelling Mechanobiology The actin cytoskeleton (AC) undergoes rapid remodelling to coordinate cellular processes during signal transduction, including changes in actin nucleation, crosslinking, and depolymerization in a time- and space-dependent manner. Switching the initial actin nucleation often provides timely control of the entire actin network formation. Located at the cell surface, the plant class I formin family is a major class of actin nucleators that rapidly respond to exterior chemical and environmental cues. Plant class I formins are structurally integrated within the plant cell wall-plasma membrane-actin cytoskeleton (CW-PM-AC) continuum, sharing similar biophysical properties to mammalian integrins that are embedded within the extracellular matrix-PM-AC continuum. In plants, perturbation of structural components of the CW-PM-AC continuum changes the biophysical properties of two dimensional-scaffolding structures, which results in uncontrolled molecular diffusion and interactions of class I formins, as well as their clustering and activities in the nucleation of the AC. Emerging studies have shown that the PM-integrated formins are highly responsive to the mechanical perturbation of CW and AC integrity changes that tune the oligomerization and condensation of formin on the cell surface. However, during diverse signalling transductions, the molecular mechanisms that spatiotemporally underlie the mechanosensing and mechanoregulation of formin for remodelling actin remain unclear. Here, the emphasis will be placed on recent developments in understanding how the molecular condensation of class I formin regulates the biochemical activities in tuning actin polymerization during plant immune signalling, as well as how the plant structural components of the CW-PM-AC continuum control formin condensation at a nanometre scale. Ministry of Education (MOE) Ministry of Health (MOH) National Medical Research Council (NMRC) National Research Foundation (NRF) This work is supported by the Singapore Ministry of Education (MOE) Tier 1(RG32/20, RT11/20), Tier 3 (MOE2019-T3-1-012), and Research Centres of Excellence-Institute for Digital Molecular Analytics and Science (IDMxS) funding awarded to YM, Tier 2 (MOE2019-T2-2-099) to Y-GG, National Research Foundation Singapore under its Open Fund–Individual Research Grant (MOH-000218) and administered by the Singapore Ministry of Health‘s National Medical Research Council (S-MT and Y-GG). 2023-03-27T01:36:47Z 2023-03-27T01:36:47Z 2022 Journal Article Ma, Z., Zhu, K., Gao, Y., Tan, S. & Miao, Y. (2022). Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator. The FEBS Journal. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/febs.16571 1742-464X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165405 10.1111/febs.16571 35816016 2-s2.0-85135156419 en RG32/20 RT11/20 MOE2019-T3-1-012 MOE2019-T2-2-099 MOH-000218 The FEBS Journal © 2022 Federation of European Biochemical Societies. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Biological sciences
Actin Remodelling
Mechanobiology
spellingShingle Science::Biological sciences
Actin Remodelling
Mechanobiology
Ma, Zhiming
Zhu, Kexin
Gao, Yong-Gui
Tan, Suet-Mien
Miao, Yansong
Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator
description The actin cytoskeleton (AC) undergoes rapid remodelling to coordinate cellular processes during signal transduction, including changes in actin nucleation, crosslinking, and depolymerization in a time- and space-dependent manner. Switching the initial actin nucleation often provides timely control of the entire actin network formation. Located at the cell surface, the plant class I formin family is a major class of actin nucleators that rapidly respond to exterior chemical and environmental cues. Plant class I formins are structurally integrated within the plant cell wall-plasma membrane-actin cytoskeleton (CW-PM-AC) continuum, sharing similar biophysical properties to mammalian integrins that are embedded within the extracellular matrix-PM-AC continuum. In plants, perturbation of structural components of the CW-PM-AC continuum changes the biophysical properties of two dimensional-scaffolding structures, which results in uncontrolled molecular diffusion and interactions of class I formins, as well as their clustering and activities in the nucleation of the AC. Emerging studies have shown that the PM-integrated formins are highly responsive to the mechanical perturbation of CW and AC integrity changes that tune the oligomerization and condensation of formin on the cell surface. However, during diverse signalling transductions, the molecular mechanisms that spatiotemporally underlie the mechanosensing and mechanoregulation of formin for remodelling actin remain unclear. Here, the emphasis will be placed on recent developments in understanding how the molecular condensation of class I formin regulates the biochemical activities in tuning actin polymerization during plant immune signalling, as well as how the plant structural components of the CW-PM-AC continuum control formin condensation at a nanometre scale.
author2 School of Biological Sciences
author_facet School of Biological Sciences
Ma, Zhiming
Zhu, Kexin
Gao, Yong-Gui
Tan, Suet-Mien
Miao, Yansong
format Article
author Ma, Zhiming
Zhu, Kexin
Gao, Yong-Gui
Tan, Suet-Mien
Miao, Yansong
author_sort Ma, Zhiming
title Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator
title_short Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator
title_full Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator
title_fullStr Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator
title_full_unstemmed Molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class I formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator
title_sort molecular condensation and mechanoregulation of plant class i formin, an integrin-like actin nucleator
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165405
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