Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10904580 | Experimental Cell Research | 2010 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
α-Actinin is a prominent actin filament associated protein for which different isoforms exist. Here, we have examined whether the two highly homologous non-muscle α-actinin isoforms 1 and 4 exhibit functional differences in astrocytoma cells. The protein levels of these isoforms were differentially regulated during the development and progression of astrocytomas, as α-actinin 1 was higher in astrocytomas compared to normal brains whereas α-actinin 4 was elevated in high-grade astrocytomas compared to normal brains and low grade astrocytomas. RNAi demonstrated contrasted contributions of α-actinin 1 and 4 to the malignant behavior of U-373, U-87 and A172 astrocytoma cells. While α-actinin 1 appeared to favor the expansion of U-373, U-87 and A172 astrocytoma cell populations, α-actinin 4 played this role only for U-373 cells. On the other hand, downregulation of α-actinin 4, but not 1, reduced cell motility, adhesion, cortical actin, and RhoA levels. Finally, in the three astrocytoma cell lines examined, α-actinin 1 and 4 had contrasted biochemical properties as α-actinin 4 was significantly more abundant in the actin cytoskeleton than α-actinin 1. Collectively, these findings suggest that α-actinin 1 and 4 are differentially regulated during the development and progression of astrocytomas because each of these isoforms uniquely contributes to distinct malignant properties of astrocytoma cells.
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Authors
Quincy Quick, Omar Skalli,