|
||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/2000//895 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 150, Number 4,
, 2000 895-904
Report |
In Vivo Importance of Actin Nucleotide Exchange Catalyzed by Profilin
drubin{at}uclink4.berkeley.edu
The actin monomer-binding protein, profilin, influences the dynamics of actin filaments in vitro by suppressing nucleation, enhancing nucleotide exchange on actin, and promoting barbed-end assembly. Profilin may also link signaling pathways to actin cytoskeleton organization by binding to the phosphoinositide PIP2 and to polyproline stretches on several proteins. Although activities of profilin have been studied extensively in vitro, the significance of each of these activities in vivo needs to be tested. To study profilin function, we extensively mutagenized the Saccharomyces cerevisiae profilin gene (PFY1) and examined the consequences of specific point mutations on growth and actin organization. The actin-binding region of profilin was shown to be critical in vivo. act1-157, an actin mutant with an increased intrinsic rate of nucleotide exchange, suppressed defects in actin organization, cell growth, and fluid-phase endocytosis of pfy1-4, a profilin mutant defective in actin binding. In reactions containing actin, profilin, and cofilin, profilin was required for fast rates of actin filament turnover. However, Act1-157p circumvented the requirement for profilin. Based on the results of these studies, we conclude that in living cells profilin promotes rapid actin dynamics by regenerating ATP actin from ADP actin–cofilin generated during filament disassembly.
Key Words: yeast cytoskeleton cofilin filament turnover ATP
© 2000 The Rockefeller University Press
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In all organisms studied to date, profilin plays a critical role in establishing and maintaining the proper organization of the actin cytoskeleton (Ayscough 1998). We have chosen to study profilin function in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae because it is a genetically tractable organism with a dynamic actin cytoskeleton. The yeast actin cytoskeleton consists of cables, which orient along the mother-bud axis, and cortical patches, which polarize in the developing bud and reorganize depending on the specific stage in the cell cycle (Pruyne and Bretscher 2000). The importance of profilin in the organization of the yeast actin cytoskeleton has been demonstrated by analysis of yeast lacking profilin. These cells grow extremely slowly, become large and rounded, lack detectable actin cables, and no longer polarize their actin patches to the bud (Haarer et al. 1990). In addition to interacting with actin, yeast profilin (Pfy1p) binds to stretches of proline residues in the FH (formin homology) domains of Bni1p and Bnr1p (Kohno et al. 1996; Evangelista et al. 1997; Imamura et al. 1997). Members of the FH protein family bind to proteins of the Rho family of small GTPases and are involved in cytokinesis and the establishment of cell polarity (Wasserman 1998). The interaction between profilin and FH proteins thus provides a link between signaling by small GTPases and the actin cytoskeleton.
Although the interactions of profilin with actin and polyproline have been studied extensively biochemically, the significance of each of these activities in vivo has been much more difficult to test. The importance of the ability of profilin to enhance nucleotide exchange on actin has been controversial. Mammalian and amoeba profilins increase the rate of nucleotide exchange on actin in a concentration-dependent manner, by as much as 1,000-fold (Mockrin and Korn 1980; Goldschmidt-Clermont et al. 1991; Vinson et al. 1998; Selden et al. 1999). However, plant profilins do not affect nucleotide exchange of rabbit muscle actin (Perelroizen et al. 1995, Perelroizen et al. 1996), and yeast profilin only increases the rate of yeast actin nucleotide exchange approximately threefold (Eads et al. 1998). Furthermore, in Xenopus extracts, actin monomers are primarily associated with ATP rather than ADP (Rosenblatt et al. 1995), suggesting that nucleotide exchange might not be a rate-limiting step during actin assembly. However, profilin may be required to desequester and/or promote nucleotide exchange on actin bound by actin monomer-binding proteins, such as cofilin and thymosin β-4 (Pantaloni and Carlier 1993; Blanchoin and Pollard 1998). Data presented here indicate that the ability of profilin to enhance nucleotide exchange on actin is an important function in vivo.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
All mutations in the PFY1 gene were generated using pAW2 as a template. After mutagenesis and verification of the mutation by restriction enzyme digestion and DNA sequencing, LEU2 was subcloned into the NotI site of each mutated plasmid.
The plasmid for overexpression of yeast profilin in Escherichia coli was pMW172 (Eads et al. 1998). To overexpress mutant profilins, pMW172 was mutagenized.
Yeast Strain Construction
Standard techniques were used to grow, manipulate, and transform yeast strains (Rose et al. 1989). Complete disruption of the PFY1 gene was performed using PCR-mediated gene replacement as described (Goode et al. 1998), using the HIS3 plasmid pRS303 (Sikorski and Hieter 1989). The disruption was generated in yeast strain DDY1102 to create strain DDY2001 (MAT a/
ade2-1/+ his3
200/his3
200 leu2-3,112/leu2-3,112 +/lys2-801 +/pfy1
::HIS3 ura3-52/ura3-52). DDY2001 was sporulated to generate the PFY1 deletion strain DDY2034 (MAT a his3
200 leu2-3,112 lys2-801 pfy1
::HIS3 ura3-52).
Plasmids carrying either PFY1 or the mutant pfy1 alleles marked with LEU2 were digested with BssHII and transformed into DDY2001 for integration at the pfy1
::HIS3 site. His–, Leu+ colonies were selected, and the presence of the mutation was verified by PCR and restriction enzyme digestion. Diploids were sporulated to generate haploid strains carrying PFY1 or mutant pfy1 alleles. The genotype of each strain was identical to that of the pfy1
strain DDY2034, except pfy1 alleles were marked with LEU2. The DDY strain numbers for the strains used in this study are listed in Table .
|
Protein Purification
Recombinant yeast profilin was purified from E. coli as described for wild-type cofilin expressed as a nonfusion protein (Lappalainen et al. 1997), except that buffers contained 20 mM Tris, pH 8.0. Profilin concentration was determined spectrophotometrically as described (Eads et al. 1998).
Yeast cofilin was purified as a GST fusion protein and cleaved from GST by thrombin digestion (Lappalainen et al. 1997). Yeast actin was purified using DNAse I affinity chromatography as described (Rodal et al. 1999).
In Vitro Assays
Binding of profilin to monomeric actin was measured by determining the amount of actin that copelleted with profilin bound to poly-L-proline (PLP) Sepharose. PLP–Sepharose was prepared as described (Rozycki et al. 1991). Variable concentrations of profilin were incubated with excess PLP–Sepharose beads in G-actin buffer (10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 0.2 mM CaCl2, 0.5 mM ATP, 0.2 mM DTT) at 4°C for 1 h. The beads were then washed three times with G-actin buffer, and G-actin was added to a final concentration of 5 µM. Samples were incubated at 4°C for 1 h. Beads were washed once with G-actin buffer, twice with G-actin buffer plus 100 mM NaCl, and were then resuspended in SDS sample buffer and subjected to SDS-PAGE. Gels were stained with Coomassie brilliant blue and quantified using the Alpha Imager 2000 system (Alpha Innotech Corp.).
Binding of profilin to monomeric actin was also measured indirectly using an actin polymerization assay. Various concentrations of profilin were mixed with 5 µM G-actin, and polymerization was initiated by the addition of 2 mM MgCl2, 100 mM KCl at room temperature. After 45 min, the reactions were centrifuged at 90,000 rpm for 20 min in a TLA100 rotor at 25°C. Protein concentration in supernatants and pellets was analyzed by SDS-PAGE as above.
Urea denaturation of profilin was measured by incubating 0.5 µM profilin in PBS buffer containing various concentrations of urea overnight at 4°C. The fluorescence of each protein was monitored at 370-nm emission and 280-nm excitation wavelengths. Two independent data sets for each profilin were normalized and averaged. Data was collected on a PTI spectrofluorometer.
The rate of actin treadmilling in the presence of profilin and cofilin was measured by monitoring the release of inorganic phosphate as described (Belmont et al. 1999a).
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
|
Previously, we have shown that mutations that decrease actin filament turnover also inhibit fluid phase endocytosis (Lappalainen and Drubin 1997; Belmont and Drubin 1998). Therefore, we examined fluid phase endocytosis in pfy1-4 and act1-157 mutants using Lucifer yellow as a marker. As shown in Fig. 3, yeast expressing pfy1-4 were defective in Lucifer yellow uptake. At 37°C, only
18% of cells expressing pfy1-4 showed detectable Lucifer yellow staining in the vacuole. In contrast, 77% of cells expressing both pfy1-4 and act1-157 showed Lucifer yellow staining, a level comparable to staining in wild-type cells (79%) and act1-157 cells (63%). In addition, of those 18% of pfy1-4 cells showing Lucifer yellow staining in the vacuole, the staining was consistently weaker in intensity than in double mutant cells (pfy1-4 and act1-157). Interestingly, suppression of the endocytic defects of pfy1-4 by act1-157 was not observed at 25°C (Fig. 3). The suppression of actin and endocytic defects of pfy1-4 by act1-157 at 37°C suggests that the ability of profilin to enhance nucleotide exchange on actin is critical for fluid phase endocytosis at high temperatures.
|
|
Yeast Profilin and Cofilin Cooperate to Increase Turnover of Yeast Actin Filaments
The ability of actin to rapidly polymerize and depolymerize is critical to its functions in vivo. Cofilin promotes depolymerization from the pointed end of actin filaments, generating ADP-actin monomers, and it inhibits exchange of ATP for ADP. Thus, the ability of profilin to recharge actin monomers with ATP, or alternatively to promote assembly at barbed ends of actin filaments (Pantaloni and Carlier 1993), may be important for the speed of actin filament turnover when cofilin is present. Indeed, vertebrate profilin and cofilin have been shown to synergize to increase the rate of actin turnover, or treadmilling, in vitro (Didry et al. 1998). We examined the turnover rate of yeast actin filaments in vitro by measuring phosphate released from actin filaments after polymerization in the presence of yeast profilin and cofilin. The combined action of Pfy1p and Cof1p increased the rate of actin filament turnover by approximately fivefold compared with actin alone (Fig. 5 A). In contrast, the rate of actin filament turnover in the presence of Pfy1-4p and Cof1p was similar to a reaction that contained only Cof1p (two- to threefold stimulation). This result is consistent with the observation that Pfy1-4p does not bind to actin. Thus, yeast profilin and cofilin synergize to increase the rate of actin filament turnover in vitro, consistent with published results on vertebrate profilins and cofilins (Didry et al. 1998).
|
Cofilin Induces Rapid Steady State Turnover of Act1-157 Filaments in the Absence of Profilin
To study the mechanism by which act1-157 suppresses the temperature sensitivity of pfy1-4, we repeated the phosphate release assays using purified Act1-157p. We found that Act1-157p filaments in the absence of profilin or cofilin release phosphate approximately twice as fast as Act1p, suggesting that at steady state nucleotide exchange might be rate-limiting for actin assembly (Fig. 5 B). In the presence of Cof1p, the rate of turnover of Act1-157p filaments is increased to approximately tenfold higher than that of Act1p alone. Pfy1-4p does not alter this increased rate of turnover, consistent with the observation that Pfy1-4p does not bind to Act1-157p (Fig. 4 B). Thus, Act1-157p turns over rapidly in the absence of Pfy1p. This result may explain why act1-157 is able to suppress the phenotypes of pfy1-4.
Two models that might explain our results and the role of profilin in promoting rapid actin filament turnover are: that profilin is required to increase the rate of nucleotide exchange under conditions of rapid turnover (i.e., in the presence of cofilin); or that profilin is required to dissociate ADP-bound actin monomers from cofilin. Although it is difficult to rigorously distinguish between these two models, we favor the first one for the following reasons. First, Act1-157 exhibits a higher intrinsic rate of nucleotide exchange, but no significant differences in polymerization or depolymerization kinetics compared with wild-type actin (Belmont et al. 1999b). If the second model were correct, we would predict that act1-157 suppresses pfy1-4 via a mechanism in which ADP-bound Act1-157p has a lower affinity for cofilin, and thus circumvents the need for profilin to dissociate the ADP-actin/cofilin complex. Using the polyproline cosedimentation assay, we indirectly examined the affinity of Cof1p for Act1-157p by testing for the ability of Cof1p to compete with Pfy1p in binding to actin. We found that Cof1p has a similar affinity for ADP-bound wild-type actin as compared with ADP-bound Act1-157p (data not shown). An additional prediction of the second model is that cof1-19, which binds less tightly to actin monomers, but has normal disassembly promoting activity on filaments, would at least partially suppress pfy1-4 (Lappalainen, P., personal communication). However, cof1-19 is synthetically lethal with pfy1-4 (Table ). Therefore, we favor a model in which profilin increases actin filament turnover in the presence of cofilin by increasing the exchange of ATP for ADP-bound actin monomers that are released as a result of the actin depolymerizing activity of cofilin.
One initially surprising observation was that, although Act1-157p filaments turn over rapidly in the presence of Cof1p, turnover is extremely slow in the presence of both Cof1p and Pfy1p. This was unexpected because act1-157 exhibits minor actin defects in vivo. We further investigated the assembly of Act1-157 filaments in the presence of Pfy1p and Cof1p and discovered that Pfy1p tightly sequesters Act1-157p in the presence of Cof1p and prevents its assembly (Fig. 5 C). In addition, based on actin assembly and polyproline cosedimentation assays (Fig. 4B and Fig. C), Pfy1p binds with a higher affinity to Act1-157p (1–2 µM, compared with 4–5 µM for Act1p). The lack of strong actin defects in act1-157 cells remains a mystery, but may indicate that the monomer-sequestering activity of profilin is regulated by additional proteins in vivo.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
An important aspect of the experiments presented here is the use of both profilin and cofilin in actin filament turnover assays. Cofilin increases the rate of actin turnover by promoting depolymerization, yet it actually decreases the rate of nucleotide exchange on actin (Blanchoin and Pollard 1998). The combination of cofilin's ability to depolymerize actin filaments and decrease the rate of actin nucleotide exchange would be predicted to generate a large pool of ADP actin. Profilin's ability to enhance exchange on actin might therefore be necessary to maximize actin turnover in the presence of cofilin. Indeed, profilin has been shown to overcome the inhibition of nucleotide exchange by the cofilin-related protein, actophorin (Blanchoin and Pollard 1998), and we have obtained similar results with yeast profilin, cofilin, and actin (Wolven, A.K., and D.G. Drubin, unpublished results). Including both profilin and cofilin in the actin filament turnover assays more accurately reflects the in vivo situation, and strengthens the conclusion that actin nucleotide exchange can be a rate-limiting step that requires profilin in vivo.
An alternative hypothesis to explain the results obtained here is that the role of profilin is to dissociate cofilin from ADP actin, rather than promote nucleotide exchange. While our results would suggest that this is not the case, we cannot rule out a model in which profilin dissociates ADP actin from cofilin by catalyzing ATP exchange on actin. It is possible that dissociation of ADP actin-cofilin and nucleotide exchange occur in a concerted manner and are mechanistically coupled.
In contrast to vertebrate and amoeba profilins, plant profilins do not appear to enhance the rate of nucleotide exchange on actin, although rabbit muscle actin was used in the studies of plant profilin (Perelroizen et al. 1996). In yeast, profilin only modestly increases the rate of ATP exchange on actin (Eads et al. 1998). Such results have led to speculation that in plants and yeast, profilin may play other roles in actin dynamics. Our results indicate that the ability of profilin to promote nucleotide exchange on actin is important in S. cerevisiae. However, profilin has additional activities in vitro and our results also suggest that other actin related and unrelated functions of profilin must be important in vivo. Evidence for this conclusion comes from the observations that act1-157 does not completely alleviate the slow growth and disrupted actin organization in yeast expressing pfy1-4, and that pfy1-4 yeast grow better than pfy1
yeast. Other important activities of profilin might include promoting barbed-end assembly, preventing pointed-end assembly, sequestering actin monomers to inhibit spontaneous nucleation, and modulating lipid chemistry (Goldschmidt-Clermont et al. 1991; Pantaloni and Carlier 1993; Kang et al. 1999). The context under which actin is assembling in vivo may determine which actin-related activity of profilin is used. Evidence that profilin may have other activities is also provided by the synthetic lethal interactions observed between pfy1-4 and srv2
, and between pfy1-4 and twf1
(Table ). Srv2p and Twfp can both sequester actin monomers (Freeman et al. 1995; Goode et al. 1998). These double mutants may have problems regulating actin monomer pools.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
A.K. Wolven was supported by a fellowship from the National Institutes of Health (GM19969). D.G. Drubin is supported by grant GM42759 from the National Institutes of Health.
Submitted: 9 March 2000
Revised: 8 June 2000
Accepted: 30 June 2000
Amy K. Wolven's present address is Incyte Genomics, Palo Alto, CA 94304.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Ayscough K.R. In vivo functions of actin-binding proteins, Curr. Opin. Cell Biol, 10, 1998, 102–111.[Medline]
Belmont L.D. Drubin D.G.. The yeast V159N actin mutant reveals roles for actin dynamics in vivo, J. Cell Biol, 142, 1998, 1289–1299.
Belmont L.D. Orlova A. Drubin D.G. Egelman E.H.. A change in actin conformation associated with filament instability after Pi release, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 96, 1999, 29–34a.
Belmont L.D. Patterson G.M. Drubin D.G.. New actin mutants allow further characterization of the nucleotide binding cleft and drug binding sites, J. Cell Sci, 112, 1999, 1325–1336b.[Abstract]
Blanchoin L. Pollard T.D.. Interaction of actin monomers with Acanthamoeba actophorin (ADF/cofilin) and profilin, J. Biol. Chem, 273, 1998, 25106–25111.
Carlsson L. Nystrom L.-E. Sundkvist I. Markey F. Lindberg U.. Actin polymerizability is influenced by profilin, a low molecular weight protein in non-muscle cells, J. Mol. Biol, 115, 1977, 465–483.[Medline]
Cope M.J. Yang S. Shang C. Drubin D.G.. Novel protein kinases Ark1p and Prk1p associate with and regulate the cortical actin cytoskeleton in budding yeast, J. Cell Biol, 144, 1999, 1203–1218.
Didry D. Carlier M.F. Pantaloni D.. Synergy between actin depolymerizing factor/cofilin and profilin in increasing actin filament turnover, J. Biol. Chem, 273, 1998, 25602–25611.
Eads J. Mahoney N.M. Vorobiev S. Wen K.-K. Rubenstien P.A. Haarer B.K. Almo S.C.. Structure determination and characterization of Saccharomyces cerevisiae profilin, Biochemistry, 37, 1998, 11171–11181.[Medline]
Evangelista M. Blundell K. Longtine M.S. Chow C.J. Adames N. Pringle J.R. Peter M. Boone C.. Bni1p, a yeast formin linking Cdc42p and the actin cytoskeleton during polarized morphogenesis, Science, 276, 1997, 118–122.
Freeman N.L. Chen Z. Horenstein J. Weber A. Field J.. An actin monomer binding activity localizes to the carboxyl-terminal half of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae cyclase-associated protein, J. Biol. Chem, 270, 1995, 5680–5685.
Goldschmidt-Clermont P.J. Machesky L.M. Doberstein S.K. Pollard T.D.. Mechanism of the interaction of human platelet profilin with actin, J. Cell Biol, 113, 1991, 1081–1089.
Goode B.L. Drubin D.G. Lappalainen P.. Regulation of the cortical actin cytoskeleton in budding yeast by twinfilin, a ubiquitous actin monomer sequestering protein, J. Cell Biol, 142, 1998, 723–733.
Haarer B.K. Lillie S.H. Adams A.E.M. Magdolen V. Bandlow W. Brown S.S.. Purification of profilin from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and analysis of profilin-deficient cells, J. Cell Biol, 110, 1990, 105–114.
Imamura H. Tanaka K. Hihara T. Umikawa M. Kamei T. Takahashi K. Sasaki T. Takai Y.. Bni1P and Bnr1Pdownstream targets of the Rho family small G-proteins which interact with profilin and regulate actin cytoskeleton in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J, 16, 1997, 2745–2755.[Medline]
Kang F. Purich D.L. Southwick F.S.. Profilin promotes barbed-end actin filament assembly without lowering the critical concentration, J. Biol. Chem, 274, 1999, 36963–36972.
Kohno H. Tanaka K. Mino A. Umikawa M. Imamura H. Fujiwara T. Fujita Y. Hotta K. Qadota H. Watanabe T.. Bni1p implicated in cytoskeletal control is a putative target of Rho1p small GTP binding protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J, 15, 1996, 6060–6068.[Medline]
Lappalainen P. Drubin D.G.. Cofilin promotes rapid actin filament turnover in vivo, Nature., 388, 1997, 78–82.[Medline]
Lappalainen P. Fedorov E.V. Fedorov A.A. Almo S.C. Drubin D.G.. Essential functions and actin-binding surfaces of yeast cofilin revealed by systematic mutagenesis, EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J, 16, 1997, 5520–5530.[Medline]
Loisel T.P. Boujemaa R. Pantaloni D. Carlier M.F.. Reconstitution of actin-based motility of Listeria and Shigella using pure proteins, Nature, 401, 1999, 613–616.[Medline]
Machesky L.M. Pollard T.D.. Profilin as a potential mediator of membrane-cytoskeleton communication, Trends Cell Biol, 3, 1993, 381–385.[Medline]
Mockrin S. Korn E.. Acanthamoeba profilin interacts with G-actin to increase the rate of exchange of actin-bound adenosine 5'-triphosphate, Biochemistry, 19, 1980, 5359–5362.[Medline]
Pantaloni D. Carlier M.-F.. How profilin promotes actin filament assembly in the presence of thymosin β-4, Cell, 75, 1993, 1007–1014.[Medline]
Perelroizen I. Carlier M.F. Pantaloni D.. Binding of divalent cation and nucleotide to G-actin in the presence of profilin, J. Biol. Chem, 270, 1995, 1501–1508.
Perelroizen I. Didry D. Christensen H. Chua N.H. Carlier M.F.. Role of nucleotide exchange and hydrolysis in the function of profilin in actin assembly, J. Biol. Chem., 271, 1996, 12302–12309.
Pollard T.D.. Structure of actin binding proteinsinsights about function at atomic resolution, Spudich J.A.. Annual Review of Cell Biology, Vol. 10, 1994, 207–249 Annual Reviews Inc Palo Alto, CA.
Pruyne D. Bretscher A. Polarization of cell growth in yeast, J. Cell Sci, 113, 2000, 571–585.[Abstract]
Rodal A.A. Tetreault J.W. Lappalainen P. Drubin D.G. Amberg D.C.. Aip1p interacts with cofilin to disassemble actin filaments, J. Cell Biol, 145, 1999, 1251–1264.
Rose M.D. Winston F.M. Hieter P., Methods In Yeast GeneticsA Laboratory Course Manual, 1989 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press Cold Spring Harbor, NYpp. 198.
Rosenblatt J. Peluso P. Mitchison T. The bulk of unpolymerized actin in Xenopus egg extracts is ATP-bound, Mol. Biol. Cell, 6, 1995, 227–236.[Abstract]
Rozycki M. Schutt C. Lindberg U.. Affinity chromatography-based purification of profilinactin, Methods Enzymol, 196, 1991, 100–118.[Medline]
Schutt C.E. Myslik J.C. Rozycki M.D. Goonesekere N.C.W. Lindberg U.. The structure of crystalline profilin-beta-actin, Nature., 365, 1993, 810–816.[Medline]
Selden L.A. Kinosian H.J. Estes J.E. Gershman L.C.. Impact of profilin on actin-bound nucleotide exchange and actin polymerization dynamics, Biochemistry, 38, 1999, 2769–2778.[Medline]
Sikorski R.S. Hieter P.. A system of shuttle vectors and yeast host strains designed for efficient manipulation of DNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Genetics, 122, 1989, 19–27.
Vinson V.K. De La Cruz E.M. Higgs H.N. Pollard T.D.. Interactions of Acanthamoeba profilin with actin and nucleotides bound to actin, Biochemistry, 37, 1998, 10871–10880.[Medline]
Wasserman S.. FH proteins as cytoskeletal organizers, Trends Cell Biol, 8, 1998, 111–115.[Medline]
Related Article
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|