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Plastin 1 widens stereocilia by transforming actin filament packing from hexagonal to liquid
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Plastin 1 widens stereocilia by transforming actin filament packing from hexagonal to liquid

Jocelyn F Krey, Evan S Krystofiak, Rachel A Dumont, Sarath Vijayakumar, Dongseok Choi, Francisco Rivero, Bechara Kachar, Sherri M Jones and Peter G Barr-Gillespie
The Journal of cell biology, Vol.215(4), pp.467-482
11/21/2016
PMID: 27811163

Abstract

Actin Cytoskeleton - metabolism Animals Carrier Proteins - genetics Cross-Linking Reagents - metabolism Hair Cells, Auditory - metabolism Hair Cells, Auditory - ultrastructure Membrane Glycoproteins - genetics Membrane Glycoproteins - metabolism Mice, Inbred C57BL Microfilament Proteins - genetics Microfilament Proteins - metabolism Mutation - genetics Proteomics Saccule and Utricle - metabolism Saccule and Utricle - physiopathology Saccule and Utricle - ultrastructure Stereocilia - metabolism Stereocilia - ultrastructure Up-Regulation
With their essential role in inner ear function, stereocilia of sensory hair cells demonstrate the importance of cellular actin protrusions. Actin packing in stereocilia is mediated by cross-linkers of the plastin, fascin, and espin families. Although mice lacking espin (ESPN) have no vestibular or auditory function, we found that mice that either lacked plastin 1 (PLS1) or had nonfunctional fascin 2 (FSCN2) had reduced inner ear function, with double-mutant mice most strongly affected. Targeted mass spectrometry indicated that PLS1 was the most abundant cross-linker in vestibular stereocilia and the second most abundant protein overall; ESPN only accounted for ∼15% of the total cross-linkers in bundles. Mouse utricle stereocilia lacking PLS1 were shorter and thinner than wild-type stereocilia. Surprisingly, although wild-type stereocilia had random liquid packing of their actin filaments, stereocilia lacking PLS1 had orderly hexagonal packing. Although all three cross-linkers are required for stereocilia structure and function, PLS1 biases actin toward liquid packing, which allows stereocilia to grow to a greater diameter.
url
https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201606036View
Published (Version of record) Open

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