β- and γ-cytoplasmic actin are nearly indistinguishable in their amino acid sequence, but are encoded by different genes that play non-redundant biological roles. The key determinants that drive their functional distinction are unknown. Here, we tested the hypothesis that β- and γ-actin functions are defined by their nucleotide, rather than their amino acid sequence, using targeted editing of the mouse genome. Although previous studies have shown that disruption of β-actin gene critically impacts cell migration and mouse embryogenesis, we demonstrate here that generation of a mouse lacking β-actin protein by editing β-actin gene to encode γ-actin protein, and vice versa, does not affect cell migration and/or organism survival. Our data suggest that the essential in vivo function of β-actin is provided by the gene sequence independent of the encoded protein isoform. We propose that this regulation constitutes a global 'silent code' mechanism that controls the functional diversity of protein isoforms.
CITATION STYLE
Vedula, P., Kurosaka, S., Leu, N. A., Wolf, Y. I., Shabalina, S. A., Wang, J., … Kashina, A. (2017). Diverse functions of homologous actin isoforms are defined by their nucleotide, rather than their amino acid sequence. ELife, 6. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.31661
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.