The proline-rich protein palladin is a binding partner for profilin

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Abstract

Palladin is an actin-associated protein that has been suggested to play critical roles in establishing cell morphology and maintaining cytoskeletal organization in a wide variety of cell types. Palladin has been shown previously to bind directly to three different actin-binding proteins vasodilator- stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP), α-actinin and ezrin, suggesting that it functions as an organizing unit that recruits actin-regulatory proteins to specific subcellular sites. Palladin contains sequences resembling a motif known to bind profilin. Here, we demonstrate that palladin is a binding partner for profilin, interacting with profilin via a poly proline-containing sequence in the amino-terminal half of palladin. Double-label immunofluorescence staining shows that palladin and profilin partially colocalize in actin-rich structures in cultured astrocytes. Our results suggest that palladin may play an important role in recruiting profilin to sites of actin dynamics. © 2005 FEBS.

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Boukhelifa, M., Moza, M., Johansson, T., Rachlin, A., Parast, M., Huttelmaier, S., … Otey, C. A. (2006). The proline-rich protein palladin is a binding partner for profilin. FEBS Journal, 273(1), 26–33. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1742-4658.2005.05036.x

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