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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 1, 2003, 23(1):1-6
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Actin-ATP Hydrolysis Is a Major Energy Drain for Neurons
Barbara W.
Bernstein and
James R.
Bamburg
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the Program in
Molecular, Cellular, and Integrative Neuroscience, Colorado State
University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523-1870
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ABSTRACT |
In cultured chick ciliary neurons, when ATP synthesis is inhibited,
ATP depletion is reduced ~50% by slowing actin filament turnover
with jasplakinolide or latrunculin A. Jasplakinolide inhibits actin
disassembly, and latrunculin A prevents actin assembly by sequestering
actin monomers. Cytochalasin D, which allows
assembly-disassembly, but only at pointed ends, is less
effective in conserving ATP. Ouabain, an
Na+-K+-ATPase inhibitor, and
jasplakinolide both prevent ~50% of the ATP loss. When applied
together, they completely prevent ATP loss over a period of 20 min,
suggesting that filament stabilization reduces ATP consumption by
decreasing actin-ATP hydrolysis directly rather than indirectly by
modulating the activity of
Na+-K+-ATPase, a major energy consumer.
Key words:
ischemia; actin filament treadmilling; intracellular ATP; jasplakinolide; latrunculin; cytoskeleton
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Introduction |
The brain constitutes ~2% of
total body weight but consumes a disproportionate 25% of total oxygen
(Magistretti, 1999 ), most of which is used to produce ATP for
electrical activity. Glutamate-generated electrical activity alone
accounts for ~80% of total brain ATP consumption (Attwell and
Laughlin, 2001 ). This large energy consumption is assumed to be needed
for restoring transmembrane ionic gradients via pumps. Often overlooked
is the abundance of actin (Kabsch and Vandekerckhove, 1992 ) and the ATP
hydrolysis required for the vital role that actin dynamics play in
presynaptic and postsynaptic regions during electrical activation
(Bernstein et al., 1998 ; Fischer et al., 1998 ). Here, we provide
evidence that the energy consumed by actin dynamics is probably great
enough to contribute significantly to the permanent neurological
deficits that occur when accidents or strokes deprive the brain of
oxygen even briefly.
Actin dynamics have been implicated in neuronal protection in a
different context. Gelsolin, a protein that severs the actin filament
and caps its fast-growing end, was reported to protect ischemically
challenged neurons by attenuating Ca2+
influx through channels requiring cytoskeletal integrity (Furukawa et
al., 1997 ; Endres et al., 1999 ). Our present data support the idea that
slowing actin dynamics may protect such neurons via a more direct
mechanism: preserving ATP.
Cycles of actin polymerization-depolymerization normally occur
continuously even in resting cells and require hydrolysis of ATP
(Belmont and Drubin, 1998 ). Actin cycling is needed presynaptically and
postsynaptically during stimulated transmission (Bernstein et al.,
1998 ; Fischer et al., 1998 ). Actin monomers with ATP bound are added to
the barbed (plus) end of the filament, and, after this addition, the
terminal phosphate is hydrolyzed and inorganic phosphate is released,
leaving ADP trapped in the actin subunit. This phosphate loss alters
the actin subunit conformation within the filament (Moraczewska et al.,
1999 ), weakening the subunit interactions and thus promoting subunit
release. The conformation change induced by ATP hydrolysis results in
different critical concentrations for subunit assembly at the two
filament ends. This difference causes actin subunits to treadmill
through the filament under steady-state conditions and consume ATP at a
rate proportional to that of filament turnover. ATP is exchanged for ADP on the freed subunit at a relatively slow rate unless enhanced by
other proteins.
It was estimated in a nucleotide-exchange study that as much as 50% of
the total ATP use of resting platelets is needed merely to maintain the
actin cytoskeleton (Daniel et al., 1986 ). However, the significance of
the cytoskeleton as an energy drain is not generally appreciated. The
bulk of the ATP consumption by the cell is credited to energetically
unfavorable chemical reactions, such as synthesis of biological
molecules, the active transport of molecules (particularly ions) across
cell membranes, and the generation of force and movement (Alberts et
al., 1994 ). We monitored ATP depletion after blockage of its synthesis.
Slowing filament turnover reduces by ~50% the ATP consumed by all
neuronal processes during the first few minutes after synthesis is
blocked. We show that this preservation of ATP is independent of the
energy used by
Na+-K+-ATPase,
the largest energy consumer in ionic homeostasis, and that blocking
both the actin filament turnover and
Na+-K+-ATPase
preserves ATP levels during prolonged ischemic insult.
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Materials and Methods |
Materials. All fluorescent dyes, phalloidin,
latrunculin A, jasplakinolide, and cytochalasin D were purchased from
Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR). Other reagents were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO) unless otherwise noted.
Cell culture and filamentous actin staining. Ciliary ganglia
of 10- to 11-d-old chick embryos were dissociated acutely by trypsinization (10 min, 37°C in 0.1% trypsin in HBSS without
Ca2+ and
Mg2+) and trituration (six to eight
ganglia) in 80 µl of Neurobasal medium-B27 supplement
(Invitrogen, San Diego, CA)-2 mM
glutamine. Cells (10 µl/chamber) were plated on a number 1 glass
coverslip coated with Matrigel (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ)
to which a CoverWell silicone rubber perfusion chamber (total capacity, 70 µl; Grace Bio-Labs, Bend, OR) had been sealed. After an additional 30 µl of medium had been added, cells were cultured overnight in a
humidified 5% CO2 incubator at 37°C before
each experiment. Cultures contained growth cones and synapses.
For F-actin staining, cells were fixed in 0.1% glutaraldehyde in PBS
for 15 min, washed three times, permeabilized for 5 min in 0.1% Triton
X-100 containing 1 mg/ml NaBH4, incubated in 7.5 U/ml rhodamine phalloidin for 3 hr in the dark, rinsed, and mounted with ProLong Antifade (Molecular Probes).
Monitoring of intracellular ATP,
Na+, and Ca2+.
Cells were incubated (30 min, humidified 5% CO2
at 37°C) in freshly made 10 µM AM
ester of magnesium green in PBS (MgGr; 475 nm excitation, 530 nm
emission). This dye increases emission as a function of free intracellular Mg2+
([Mg2+]i) without
shifting emission wavelength (Haugland, 1996 ). Cells were washed two
times with PBS and incubated in growth medium with experimental reagent
or its buffer. These included jasplakinolide, latrunculin A,
cytochalasin D, and ouabain (Kimelberg et al., 1979 ). Cells were washed
two times with PBS and transferred to a heated stage (35°C) of a
Nikon (Tokyo, Japan) Diaphot microscope with a Nikon 20×
objective for live cell fluorescence microscopy and a Nikon 60× oil
immersion objective and oil immersion condenser for differential
interference contrast (DIC) microscopy. Typically, images at three time
points were acquired automatically before addition of ATP-synthesis
inhibitors (1 vol of 20 mM
NaN3-12 mM 2-deoxyglucose
in PBS) and during and after addition of inhibitors.
The cells were treated similarly for experiments with sodium green and
AM forms of Mag-fura-2 and fura-2, and the same general procedure was
followed as outlined above for cells loaded with MgGr. A filter cube
(480 ± 15 nm bandpass excitation filter, 510 nm dichroic
mirror, and 535 ± 20 nm emission filter) was used for MgGr and
sodium green. For fura dyes, 340 ± 7.5 and 380 ± 7.5 nm
excitation filters in a computer-controlled filter wheel, a 400 nm
dichroic mirror, and a 460 ± 25 nm bandpass emission filter were
used. Calcium levels were determined (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985 ) with a
calibration kit (Molecular Probes).
Image acquisition and analysis. Metamorph software (version
4.6; Universal Imaging Corporation, West Chester, PA) was used to
control camera settings, store images, and drive all shutters [xenon
lamp, high-pressure mercury lamp, and PXL PhotoMetrics (Tucson,
AZ) cooled CCD camera fitted with a Kodak 1400 chip (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY)], a programmable microscope stage, focus control, and an excitation filter wheel. In the typical experiment, four stage positions were stored, and images were taken of 5-10 microscope fields to the right of each stored position. Stacks consisting of 10-15 images of each microscope field taken at ~2 min
intervals were analyzed by thresholding the fluorescent neuronal somata, transferring the average intensity of the somata and
neighboring noncell areas (background) to an Excel (version 97;
Microsoft, Redmond, WA) electronic spreadsheet, and reducing those data
to intensity increases as a function of time before and after addition of ATP-synthesis inhibitors.
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Results |
Two membrane-permeable marine natural products, jasplakinolide and
latrunculin A, were used to determine the effects of reducing cycles of
actin assembly-disassembly on ATP consumption. Both bind with 1:1
stoichiometry to actin, latrunculin A to monomeric actin and
jasplakinolide to actin subunits in filamentous actin (F-actin)
(Spector et al., 1999 ). Jasplakinolide reduces turnover rate primarily
by inhibiting the release of subunits from the filament pointed end
(Bubb et al., 2000 ). Latrunculin A sequesters monomers as they are
released from filaments and prevents their reassembly (Morton et al.,
2000 ), thereby reducing turnover. It may also preserve ATP by slowing
nucleotide exchange when it complexes with G-actin (Belmont et al.,
1999 ). Cytochalasin D, also used and also membrane permeable, interacts
very differently with actin: it caps the barbed end, preventing
assembly-disassembly there but still allowing it at the pointed end
(Goddette and Frieden, 1986 ).
To monitor the loss of ATP in live cells, we took advantage of the fact
that the affinity of Mg2+ for ATP
(Kd = 50 ± 10 µM) (Gupta et al., 1983 ) is ~10-fold higher than for ADP or AMP (Leyssens et al., 1996 ). As ATP is hydrolyzed to
ADP and AMP,
[Mg2+]i rises
(Budinger et al., 1998 ). Figure
1a shows that the rate of ATP
depletion in neuronal soma of cells loaded with the fluorescent dye
MgGr immediately after ATP synthesis is blocked by the oxidative phosphorylation inhibitor NaN3 and the glycolysis
inhibitor 2-deoxyglucose. In these chemically ischemic cells,
preincubation in either 10 nM jasplakinolide or 1 µM latrunculin A for 45 min significantly attenuates the rate of ATP consumption. Neither of these compounds, used in the absence of ATP depletion, affects MgGr fluorescence (data
not shown). Cells treated with 5 µM to 10 mM cytochalasin D show only a slight reduction in
the rate of ATP depletion compared with control cells (only 10 µM data shown in Fig. 1a). The phase micrograph in Figure 1b shows large ciliary neuron somata
and extensive process outgrowth typical of these cultures; 40 min of
ATP depletion causes somata to shrivel and processes to retract dramatically (Fig. 1c).

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Figure 1.
a, Slowing filament turnover
conserves ATP. Time-lapse imaging of ciliary neurons, loaded with MgGr,
was used to monitor ATP depletion after a block in ATP synthesis. As
ATP is depleted, [Mg2+]i increases.
Analysis includes all cells in 20 fields. Similar results were seen in
two replicas of this experiment; mean ± SEM of >100 cells.
b, c, Phase micrographs of fixed neurons
before (b) and 40 min after
(c) application of ATP-synthesis block (10 mM NaN3 to 6 mM 2-deoxyglucose).
Chemically ischemic cells show extensive neurite retraction, somata
shrinking, and rounding, lysed cell debris (arrowheads),
and vacuoles (arrows). Scale bar, 30 µm.
jas, Jasplakinolide; lat A, latrunculin
A; cyto D, cytochalasin D.
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We chose to use 10 nM jasplakinolide because, as seen in
Figure 2a-c, higher levels,
rather than merely slowing disassembly and stabilizing existing
F-actin, induce abnormal amounts of assembled actin. This effect is
consistent with the inhibition of disassembly and reduction of nuclei
needed for actin assembly by jasplakinolide (Cramer, 1999 ; Bubb et al.,
2000 ). In these ciliary neuron growth cones, the
jasplakinolide-induced assembly is manifested by the elaboration of
filopodia that extend as a result of bundled F-actin elongation (Fig.
2a-c); filopodia contain parallel bundles of F-actin
(Forscher and Smith, 1988 ). We avoided inducing assembly that would perturb multiple aspects of cell physiology. To determine the minimum concentration of jasplakinolide needed to slow actin filament turnover (Fig. 2d-g), we used FM1-43
[N-(3-triethylammoniumpropyl)-4-(4-(dibutylamino)styryl) pyridinium dibromide] to monitor a process that depends on
F-actin assembly-disassembly, the recycling of transmitter
vesicles (Bernstein et al., 1998 ). Vesicle recycling indicates that 6 nM is too low, and the growth cone morphology
indicates that 20 nM is too high. Morphological
evidence for F-actin stabilization by jasplakinolide is seen in the DIC
micrographs of Figure 3, a and
b. Figure 3a shows the promotion of actin
disassembly by latrunculin A when jasplakinolide is absent. The
dose-dependent nature of this effect of jasplakinolide is plotted in
Figure 3c.

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Figure 2.
The minimum jasplakinolide concentration needed to
stabilize filaments is >6 nM. a-c,
Incubation in as little as 20 nM jasplakinolide
(jas) induces a filopodial expansion, indicating
stimulation of actin assembly rather than mere stabilization of
F-actin, here stained with rhodamine phalloidin. Scale bar, 10 µm.
d, Transmitter vesicle recycling depends on filament
turnover rate (Bernstein et al., 1998 ) and is attenuated by
preincubation in jasplakinolide >6 nM. Cells were
depolarized in a 75 mM K+ buffer
containing the fluorescent styryl dye FM1-43 (10 µM),
which is used to monitor depolarization-induced vesicle cycling
(Cochilla et al., 1999 ). g, Overlay of DIC
(e) and fluorescence (f) images,
showing depolarization-induced FM1-43 uptake in ciliary calyx. Scale
bar, 20 µm.
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Figure 3.
Morphological evidence for promotion of actin
disassembly by latrunculin (Lat A) and stabilization of
F-actin by jasplakinolide (Jas). a, DIC
micrographs of live cells without jasplakinolide pretreatment show
lysis and loss of cell shape (flattening) after 15 min of incubation in
1 µM latrunculin A. The dose-dependent nature of
jasplakinolide stabilization of cell morphology seen in
b is plotted in c. A concentration as low
as 8 nM has a stabilizing effect. All cells in >20 fields
were included in data plotted for each jasplakinolide
concentration.
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Evidence for the appropriateness of monitoring
[Mg2+]i to follow
the rate of ATP depletion involved two other studies. Calcium is the
most likely species to interfere with Mg2+
detection. However, as in the case of cardiomyocytes (Leyssens et al.,
1996 ), it appears not to interfere with
[Mg2+]i detection.
In ciliary neurons, ATP depletion elevates
[Ca2+]i from 350 to 400 nM (Fig.
4a), an increase that is six
times less than that elicited by 1 mM caffeine
(from 350 to 645 nM) (Jha et al., 2002 ). Because
the [Ca2+]i
increase elicited by 1 mM caffeine has no effect
on MgGr intensity (data not shown), the far smaller
[Ca2+]i increase
caused by ATP depletion should not affect MgGr intensity either.

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Figure 4.
Effects of actin modulators on ATP,
Na+, and Ca2+ levels in
ischemically stressed cells. a, Reducing filament
turnover moderates ischemically induced increase in
[Ca2+]i but is not likely to
contribute significantly to ATP conservation of jasplakinolide
(jas)- and latrunculin A (lat
A)-treated cells. b, Similar time courses were
observed for ATP depletion in rat embryonic day 18 brain cortical cells
measured with either a cell lysate-luciferase assay or an
[Mg2+]i fluorescent dye indicator and
for ciliary cells using MgGr or Mag-fura-2; exponential curve fit
shown. c, d, Actin assembly modulators conserve ATP via
a reduction in actin-ATP hydrolysis rather than a reduction in
Na+-K+-ATPase activity.
c, Preincubation in 10 nM jasplakinolide or
1 µM latrunculin A accelerates
[Na+]i increase during ATP depletion.
Only in ATP-depleted control cells is [ATP] low enough to reverse
Na+-Ca2+ exchanger, pulling
Ca2+ in and extruding Na+. Not unexpectedly,
PBS-1.5 mM ouabain, an
Na+-K+-ATPase inhibitor, causes
the fastest rise in Na+. d,
Conservation of ATP by ouabain and jasplakinolide is additive.
a-d, Mean ± SEM of two or three experiments;
n = 200-300 cells in 60 fields.
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Second, [Mg2+]i
shows the same rise when ATP synthesis is blocked in ciliary cells
loaded with the ratiometric fluorescent
Mg2+ indicator Mag-fura-2. Moreover, the
time course of ATP depletion measured by a cell extract assay on the
basis of luciferase (Minamide et al., 2000 ) is identical to that
monitored via fluorescent dye (Fig. 4b).
The observed conservation of ATP obtained by pretreatment with
jasplakinolide and latrunculin A (Fig. 1a) could be a result of a reduction in the demand placed on active transport species that maintain ion gradients. If, for instance, slowing filament turnover reduced the
[Na+]i, the rate
of ATP depletion might be reduced because there is a lighter load on
the
Na+-K+-ATPase
rather than a reduction in the hydrolysis of ATP associated with
filament turnover. Conversely, Figure 4c shows that
jasplakinolide and latrunculin A accelerate the
[Na+]i increase
induced by chemical ischemia. One could argue that [Na+]i rises
faster and ATP depletion is slowed with actin modulators because the
Na+-K+-ATPase
activity is blocked by them. If this were true, inhibiting the
Na+-K+-ATPase
activity of jasplakinolide-treated cells with ouabain should not slow
ATP depletion much more than jasplakinolide alone. Yet we see in Figure
4d that jasplakinolide plus ouabain, a potent specific
inhibitor of
Na+-K+-ATPase
(Kimelberg et al., 1979 ), is additive in effect, i.e., in combination,
they eliminate most of the ATP depletion. This finding supports the
notion that the conservation of ATP seen with inhibitors of actin
filament turnover occurs via a reduction in the hydrolysis of ATP
associated with dynamically regulated actin.
Conservation of ATP might also be at least partially caused by
jasplakinolide and latrunculin A reducing the energy drain involved in
regulating
[Ca2+]i. Cells
pretreated with either jasplakinolide or latrunculin A initially show
the same ischemia-induced increase in
[Ca2+]i as control
cells. After the first few minutes, the rise in [Ca2+]i is
somewhat less than that of control cells (Fig. 4a).
Regulation of
[Ca2+]i in cells
treated with actin modulators may contribute slightly to the observed
conservation of ATP.
 |
Discussion |
More than 15 years have elapsed since the authors of a
nucleotide-exchange study estimated that maintenance of the actin
cytoskeleton could be responsible for as much as 50% of the total ATP
consumption in resting platelets (Daniel et al., 1986 ). One might
expect the fraction of ATP consumed by the cytoskeleton to be higher in
platelets than in whole cells, because platelets are enucleate cell
fragments derived from megakaryocytes and have much reduced
ATP-dependent biosynthetic activity. Here, we provide evidence from
live neurons that supports the idea that actin dynamics are a major
ATP-consuming process in bona fide cells.
Understanding ATP turnover in neurons is important clinically because
neurons are ischemically sensitive and some neurodegenerative diseases
are triggered by transient ischemic events (Aliev et al., 2002 ). One
indication of the significance of actin for the physiology of
oxidatively stressed neurons is the abundant formation of abnormal
actin-containing inclusions ("rods") within minutes of ischemic
insult (Minamide et al., 2000 ). Rods appear in the axons and dendrites
of cultured hippocampal and cortical cells and contain proteins of the
actin depolymerizing factor (ADF)-cofilin family that enhance the
rapid turnover of actin filaments (Bamburg, 1999 ). We suggest that the
sequestering of proteins during the initial transient formation of rods
spares cellular ATP by reducing actin dynamics. The reappearance of
rods within 1 d after insult may contribute to pathological
neurite degeneration (Minamide et al., 2000 ).
Our findings also have interesting implications for cell biology
because they allow for a new method of estimating filament length in
neurons. If one assumes total ATP use of 80 µmol · l 1 · sec 1
for brain tissue, which can be derived from human cerebral blood flow
and metabolic rates (Sokoloff, 1996 ), then actin turnover is
responsible for 50% of the ATP turnover, or ~40
µmol · l 1 · sec 1.
The actin treadmilling rate in cells is ~20
sec 1, assuming that it is 200 times
faster than the in vitro rate of 0.1 sec 1
(Zigmond, 1993 ), i.e., there is a release of 20 subunits per pointed
end per second (Didry et al., 1998 ). Because the rate-limiting step for
actin-associated ATP hydrolysis is the subunit release rate, a
concentration of filament ends of 2 µmol/l is
required for 20 subunits per pointed end per second for the degradation of 40 µmol · l 1 · sec 1
ATP. Assuming that total cellular actin concentration is 100 µM, a filament end concentration of 2 µM means there is an average of only 50 subunits per filament. This is significantly shorter than the estimate
for the average filament length in neurons, which is 0.55 µm or 204 subunits (~370 subunits per micrometer) (Fath and Lasek, 1988 ). The
discrepancy of approximately fourfold is not large given the possible
errors in the estimates used here but could also arise from the
difficulty of visualizing short filaments by electron microscopy of
axoplasm. The filament distribution in neurons might consist of some
long, easily visualized filaments and a larger population of short filaments.
The approach we used, pharmacologically slowing filament turnover while
blocking ATP synthesis, clearly could have effects on ATP-dependent
processes unrelated to actin-ATP hydrolysis. Many proteins involved in
ion gradient regulation are modulated by the actin cytoskeleton, are
interdependent, and do use ATP (Mills et al., 1994 ). The active
transport protein most likely to contribute to ATP depletion in this
study is
Na+-K+-ATPase,
because it is a major energy consumer and because its activity is
stimulated by G-actin (Cantiello, 1995 ). One might expect slowing
filament turnover and preserving ATP to reduce the pathological
increase in [Na+]i
that is an early, profoundly injurious effect of ischemia. The
[Na+]i overload
inhibits the
Na+-H+
exchanger, thus acidifying ischemically stressed cells, and the [Na+]i overload
also inhibits the
Na+-Ca2+
exchanger, causing Ca2+ overload (Friedman
and Haddad, 1994 ). Surprisingly, although jasplakinolide and
latrunculin A preserve ATP and so should enhance the ability of
Na+-K+-ATPase
to extrude Na+ and minimize its
intracellular accumulation, they instead exacerbate [Na+]i
accumulation. A possible explanation for this observation is that
modulation of the actin cytoskeleton inhibits
Na+-K+-ATPase.
However, this appears not to be the case, because cells incubated in
ouabain and jasplakinolide show an additive reduction in ATP depletion.
This finding suggests that ATP preservation resulting from actin
modulation does not occur via inhibition of the
Na+-K+-ATPase
but rather via attenuation of actin-ATP hydrolysis per se. Actin-ATP
hydrolysis may account for <50% of the total ATP consumed by mature
neurons for two reasons. First,
Na+-K+-ATPase
immunostaining, and perhaps activity, increases in rat hippocampus
during the first 5 postnatal weeks (Fukuda and Prince, 1992 ). Second,
actin turnover may be faster in growth cones, in which
assembly-disassembly underlies motility, than in mature terminals; our
cultures contained both growth cones and terminals.
Actin assembly modulators probably amplify the ischemic
Na+ overload by a mechanism involving the
Na+-Ca2+
exchanger. This regulator normally helps to maintain the steep Ca2+ gradient of healthy cells by
extruding Ca2+, but when the
Na+ load becomes extreme, as it does
during ischemia or even tetanic stimulation (Zhong et al., 2001 ), the
exchanger reverses and extrudes Na+.
Apparently, the actin modulators maintain sufficiently high ATP levels
to prevent attainment of
[Na+]i that
reverses the
Na+-Ca2+
exchanger. Hence, cells treated with actin modulators continue to
extrude Ca2+ in exchange for
Na+ influx, resulting in elevated
[Na+]i and
somewhat reduced
[Ca2+]i relative
to control ischemic cells.
Jasplakinolide slows filament turnover by reducing the subunit off-rate
from the naked F-actin pointed end (Bubb et al., 2000 ). If any
non-actin-related effects of jasplakinolide occur, they have been
minimized in this study by using the lowest concentration necessary for
filament stabilization (10 nM). In addition to the already
cited off-rate effect on naked filaments, jasplakinolide also slows
turnover by competing with ADF for filament binding (Chen, 2001 ). ADF
and cofilin are the major enhancers of actin filament dynamics in most
cells; they both sever filaments and promote disassembly (Bamburg,
1999 ). It is possible that jasplakinolide preserves ATP by stabilizing
ATP bound to filament subunits rather than by reducing the release rate
of subunits. However, this mechanism would also support our conclusion
that the hydrolysis of ATP associated with actin is a process that
consumes a major fraction of the total energy of the cell.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received June 14, 2002; revised Sept. 13, 2002; accepted Oct. 16, 2002.
This work was supported in part by March of Dimes Birth Defects
Foundation Research Grant 6-FY99-627 (B.W.B.), by National Institutes
of Health Grants GM-35126 and NS-40371, and by Alzheimer's Association
Grant IIRG-01-2730 (J.R.B.).
Correspondence should be addressed to Barbara W. Bernstein,
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 1870 Campus Delivery,
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523-1870. E-mail:
bwb{at}lamar.colostate.edu.
 |
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