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Article |
EGF-induced PIP2 hydrolysis releases and activates cofilin locally in carcinoma cells
Correspondence to Jacco van Rheenen: jvanrhee{at}aecom.yu.edu
Lamellipodial protrusion and directional migration of carcinoma cells towards chemoattractants, such as epidermal growth factor (EGF), depend upon the spatial and temporal regulation of actin cytoskeleton by actin-binding proteins (ABPs). It is generally hypothesized that the activity of many ABPs are temporally and spatially regulated by PIP2; however, this is mainly based on in vitro–binding and structural studies, and generally in vivo evidence is lacking. Here, we provide the first in vivo data that directly visualize the spatial and temporal regulation of cofilin by PIP2 in living cells. We show that EGF induces a rapid loss of PIP2 through PLC activity, resulting in a release and activation of a membrane-bound pool of cofilin. Upon release, we find that cofilin binds to and severs F-actin, which is coincident with actin polymerization and lamellipod formation. Moreover, our data provide evidence for how PLC is involved in the formation of protrusions in breast carcinoma cells during chemotaxis and metastasis towards EGF.
| Introduction |
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In EGF-stimulated mammary carcinoma cells, the increase in cofilin-dependent barbed ends occurs in two transients: one at 1 min, and a late one at 3 min (Mouneimne et al., 2004). The first barbed end transient depends on PLC (Mouneimne et al., 2004), but not on PI3K or cofilin-dephosphorylation activity (Mouneimne et al., 2004; Song et al., 2006), and is required for directional sensing during chemotaxis (Mouneimne et al., 2006). However, it is not clear how PLC regulates cofilin activity. PLC cleaves the plasma membrane (PM) phospholipid PIP2 into DAG and IP3. Structural and in vitro–binding studies suggest that PIP2 can regulate ABPs such as cofilin. For example, structural studies showed that the putative PIP2-binding sites of many ABPs are overlapping with the sites that are important for F-actin binding, and therefore lipid binding would prevent actin binding (Yonezawa et al., 1990; Ojala et al., 2001; Yin and Janmey, 2003; Gorbatyuk et al., 2006). In vitro–binding studies showed that the activity of many ABPs is inhibited by PIP2-containing lipid micelles. Therefore, it has been hypothesized that ABPs bind to and are inhibited by PIP2 in the PM, and upon PLC-mediated PIP2 reduction, the ABPs get released and activated (Goldschmidt-Clermont et al., 1991, 1992; Janmey and Lindberg, 2004; Di Paolo and De Camilli, 2006; Janetopoulos and Devreotes, 2006; Logan and Mandato, 2006). Indeed gelsolin, a G-actin sequestering and F-actin capping ABP, is released from membrane fractions when PLC is activated (Chen et al., 1996). However, the direct visualization in living cells of the PIP2 hydrolysis and the subsequent translocation from the PM and activation of ABPs is generally lacking. Here, we have tested this hypothesis in living cells for cofilin because the EGF-induced activation of cofilin is PLC dependent in breast carcinoma cells, and because cofilin has been proposed to bind to PIP2 in vitro.
In this study, we provide evidence that in mammary carcinoma cells, cofilin is locally activated by release of a membrane-associated pool of cofilin upon EGF-stimulated PIP2 reduction. By colocalization, FRET, and membrane fractionation studies, we show that a fraction of cofilin is membrane associated, and that this association is reduced upon decreases in the PIP2 level. Using FRET- and FLIP-based experiments and a cofilin-severing assay, we show that the released cofilin locally binds to F-actin and severs actin filaments. This is the first direct in vivo demonstration that cofilin is regulated by PIP2. Moreover, to our knowledge this is the first report that directly visualizes the spatial and temporal regulation of an ABP regulation by PIP2 in living cells.
| Results |
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Cofilin leaves the PM upon PLC-dependent PIP2 reduction in living cells
To follow the translocation of cofilin in living cells, we expressed a chimera of GFP and cofilin in MTLn3 cells. GFP-cofilin is recognized by GFP and cofilin antibodies and the localization by GFP is similar to that found by antibody staining (Fig. 3, A and B). Translocation of GFP-cofilin from the PM was measured by FRET between GFP-cofilin and a membrane-targeted mCherry (mCherry-CAAX) (Fig. 3 C).
FRET (as measured by sensitized emission [sens]) was only observed at the PM (Fig. 3 D; for control cells see Fig. S4 A, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200706206/DC1) because mCherry-CAAX labeled exclusively the PM and FRET only occurs for molecules in close proximity (<10 nm) (Fig. 3 C). FRET (sens) values may vary between cells due to (1) variations in expression levels of the fluorescent proteins (van Rheenen et al., 2005), and (2) different excitation and detection settings (e.g., PMT settings) (van Rheenen et al., 2004). However, we compared FRET (sens) values in the same cells before and after stimulation, thus the concentration of the probes or the detection sensitivity did not change during the experiment and FRET changes can be observed as relative changes to the initial FRET (sens) value. Translocation of cofilin from the PM led to a loss of FRET, and indeed, a rapid decrease in cofilin FRET (sens) was observed upon EGF stimulation and MβCD treatment (Fig. 3 D and for quantifications, Fig. S4 B), which was accompanied by an area increase resulting from EGF-stimulated protrusion (Fig. 3 E). GFP-cofilin translocation is PLC dependent because FRET (sens) decreases were not observed in cells treated with U73122 (Fig. 3 D and Fig. S4 B). To control for photobleaching (<5%) or the apparent redistribution of the probes during EGF-induced changes in cell shape, we divided the sensitized emission by the total amount of GFP or mCherry to obtain apparent donor (Ed) and acceptor (Ea) FRET efficiency. This concentration-independent FRET analysis confirmed EGF-induced FRET changes (Fig. S4 B) excluding any effects of bleaching and redistribution of the probe. To test this in more detail, we measured FRET (sens) between mCherry-CAAX and a GFP that was continuously tagged to the PM (GFP-CAAX) (Fig. S4 C). As expected, EGF stimulation did not result in lower FRET values. These data, together with the FRET efficiency analysis, exclude that FRET (sens) changes observed in Fig. 3, D and E, are a result of (1) changes in mCherry-CAAX, (2) changes in cells shape, and (3) photobleaching.
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Cofilin leaves the PM upon PLC-independent PIP2 reduction
Collectively, our data suggest that the translocation of cofilin from the PM is mediated by PLC-dependent reduction in PIP2. If so, then the reduction of PIP2 by other means should also cause cofilin to leave the PM. Rapid loss of PIP2-independent PLC can be initiated by a rapamycin-induced recruitment of a phosphoinositide 5-phosphatase (5-ptase) enzyme domain to the PM (Fig. 4 A; Fig. S5, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200706206/DC1).
This translocation is mediated by the heterodimerization of the FRB domain at the PM and the FKBP12-tagged 5-ptase domain upon rapamycin exposure (Heo et al., 2006; Varnai et al., 2006). The 5-ptase domain dephosphorylates PIP2 into PIP, leading to the loss of PIP2 at the PM (Fig. 4 A). In line with our PLC data, rapamycin also induced the translocation of cofilin from the PM (Fig. 4 B), confirming that this translocation is mediated by a loss in PIP2. Moreover, upon rapamycin exposure, we observed the formation of membrane protrusions, suggesting an activation of cofilin (Fig. 4 C; Video 1, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200706206/DC1). As expected, rapamycin-induced membrane protrusions are not inhibited by the PLC inhibitor U73122 (Fig. 4 C).
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Cofilin released from the PM is active
Our model predicts that the translocation of the spatially confined and membrane-associated cofilin (Fig. 2 A, the xz projection) will lead to a local increase in activity. Active cofilin binds to and severs F-actin (Wang et al., 2007). To test whether cofilin activity increases upon PLC-mediated PIP2 reduction, we measured cofilin binding to F-actin by FRET. MTLn3 cells were fixed using a method that retains F-actin but loses G-actin (Song et al., 2006) and immunostained for endogenous cofilin (donor: Alexa 488) and F-actin (acceptor: rhodamine), and FRET was measured by acceptor photobleaching experiments. If cofilin is membrane bound, the distance between cofilin and F-actin is large, resulting in low FRET values. If cofilin is bound to F-actin, these molecules are in close proximity and FRET will be high in a relatively non-diffusible location. Cofilin/actin FRET increased upon EGF stimulation or MβCD-treatment, indicating that cofilin binds to actin filaments within 60 s after EGF stimulation (Fig. 5 A). Interestingly, cofilin–actin filament binding is reduced if PLC is inhibited, showing that the cofilin that binds to F-actin originates from the PM (Fig. 5 A).
Strikingly, localized application of EGF by a micropipette resulted in a localized increase in FRET, where FRET values were two times higher at the front of the cell close to the pipette than at the opposite side of the cell (Fig. 5 B). This strongly suggests that localized EGF application results in a local translocation of cofilin from the PM to F-actin.
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| Discussion |
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In this manuscript, we tested the hypothesis that a pool of cofilin is associated with and inhibited by PIP2 in the PM, and that it can be released and activated upon PLC-mediated PIP2 hydrolysis. Using biochemical, FRET, and FLIP experiments, we identified three cofilin compartments in the cell—the cytosolic, PM-associated, and F-actin–bound compartments—the latter two at the periphery of the cell. FLIP experiments showed that cofilin can rapidly cycle between these compartments and that upon EGF stimulation, cofilin molecules at the PM compartment translocate to the F-actin compartment. These observations suggest the activity cycle shown in Fig. 7. In unstimulated cells, cofilin at the cell periphery is mainly localized in the PM compartment. Upon EGF-induced PIP2 reduction, this pool is released from the PM and translocates to the nearby F-actin compartment. The increase in the number of cofilin molecules that bind to actin filaments leads to actin severing, which in turn leads to an increase in free barbed ends and cofilin–G-actin products. The cofilin–G-actin product is not able to bind to F-actin or the PM, and therefore diffuses to the cytosol compartment. Cofilin is released from the cofilin–G-actin complex by phosphorylation in order to reenter the PM or F-actin compartments. The result of releasing cofilin from the PM is an increase in the number of barbed ends in the F-actin compartment followed by the elongation of filaments by polymerization from the barbed ends of the severed filaments. The newly polymerized actin filaments are preferred by the ARP2/3 complex for binding (Ichetovkin et al., 2002). Each ARP2/3 complex nucleates a new daughter branch from the side of the cofilin-generated mother filament, resulting in a large amplification of actin polymerization resulting from cofilin activity. This actin polymerization is the driving force for the formation of membrane protrusions.
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As illustrated in Fig. 7, our data demonstrated that cofilin molecules at the PM compartment are released and activated by decreases in the PIP2 level induced by PLC or a 5-ptase. Whether cofilin at the PM compartment is inactive through direct PIP2 binding or indirectly through an adaptor molecule cannot be concluded from our data. For example, we cannot exclude the possibility that cofilin interacts with a protein at the PM, resulting in cooperative PM binding and cofilin inactivation. Cooperative binding may lead to a higher apparent affinity for the PM than expected from in vitro–binding affinities (McLaughlin et al., 2002) and the strong selectivity of PM association for the dephosphorylated form of cofilin, which is not predicted from structural studies (Gorbatyuk et al., 2006). A reduction of PIP2 in the PM may lead to a direct reduction of cofilin–PIP2 binding, or in the case of cooperative binding, it may lead to a reduced cofilin adaptor protein binding or adaptor protein PIP2 binding. Although we cannot exclude cooperative binding, existing biochemical data point toward direct binding of cofilin to PIP2 because cofilin binds specifically to PIP2 in PIP-strips (unpublished data), and cofilin activity in vitro is inhibited by micelles containing PIP2 (Yonezawa et al., 1990, 1991; Ojala et al., 2001). Although the binding mechanisms in both models may differ, the output is the same: PIP2 reduction leads to the release from the PM and a local activation of cofilin.
In polarized cells, the activation of cofilin is restricted toward the chemoattractant source achieved by a local excitation global inhibition (LEGI) mechanism (Mouneimne et al., 2006). This LEGI mechanism involves the global phosphorylation of cofilin in the cytosol compartment by LIMK in response to EGF stimulation in breast carcinoma cells in concert with cofilin's local activation by PLC at the PM and its translocation to the F-actin compartment (Fig. 7). The rapid phosphorylation of cofilin close to the actin compartment acts to sharpen the spatial location of cofilin activation. Therefore, the local activation of cofilin by PLC as shown in this study is the key to the initiation of local actin polymerization required for chemotaxis, as postulated previously (Mouneimne et al., 2006; Song et al., 2006).
It has been widely hypothesized that the activities of various ABPs such as gelsolin, profilin, capping protein, and cofilin are modulated by phospholipid binding (Janmey and Lindberg, 2004; Di Paolo and De Camilli, 2006; Janetopoulos and Devreotes, 2006; Logan and Mandato, 2006). However, this hypothesis is mainly based on structural and in vitro–binding studies. Here, we provide compelling in vivo evidence demonstrating the activation of an ABP, cofilin, by varying a phospholipid, PIP2. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that the activation of cofilin by PLC-induced changes in PIP2 levels causes a translocation of cofilin from the PM compartment to the F-actin compartment, suggesting a mechanism for how the activities of other PIP2-regulated ABPs may be localized in cells.
| Materials and methods |
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DNA constructs and transfections
The pNA3 expression vectors with inserts eCFP-PH(PLC
1), and GFP-CAAX were a gift of K. Jalink (Netherlands Cancer Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands). PM-FRB-CFP and mRFP-FKBP-5-ptase domain were a gift of T. Balla (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, NIH, Bethesda, MD). pEYFP-Mem was from Clonetech Laboratories, Inc. pcDNA3 with the insert of mCherry-CAAX was obtained by replacing GFP of pcDNA3-GFP-CAAX with mCherry using the BamHI and EcoRI restriction sites. GFP-cofilin was constructed by subcloning the rat cofilin from peGFP-N1-cofilin (described in DesMarais et al. [2004]) into pEGFP-C1 with HindIII. A frame shift was corrected by removing the overhang of SacI by T4 polymerase. Constructs were transfected using Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) at 1µg DNA per MatTek dish. After transfection, the cells were washed with fresh medium and incubated until use.
Immunofluorescence
MTLn3 cells were fixed and permeabilized as previously described (Song et al., 2006). In brief, cells were simultaneously fixed and extracted using 3.7% paraformaldehyde, 0.1% glutaraldehyde (Electron Microscopy Sciences), and 0.075% mg/ml saponin (Sigma-Aldrich) in PBS. Compared with sequential fixation and detergent extraction protocols, simultaneous fixation and extraction results in depletion of soluble G-actin (Song et al., 2006). Primary antibodies diluted in blocking buffer were incubated with the fixed cells for 1 h. Secondary antibodies (AlexaFluor 488 or 555; Molecular Probes) were diluted in blocking buffer and incubated with the cells for 1 h. Cells were washed and mounted in PBS.
FRET-based PIP2 hydrolysis assay
Kinetic analysis of PIP2 hydrolysis by FRET was assayed as described (van der Wal et al., 2001) with some modifications. Cells were placed on an inverted microscope (model 470; Olympus) equipped with Zeiss EC Plan-NeoFluar 40x/1.3 OIL PH3 objective, a computer-driven cooled CCD camera, humidified CO2 chamber, and were kept at 37°C. Excitation was done with a Lambda DG-4 using a D430/25 CFP excitation filter, and IPLab Spectrum software (VayTek) was used to collect images. A ND2 filter was used in the excitation path to minimize photo toxicity during long experiments. A dual-band dichroic mirror 86002v2bs was used (Chroma Technology Corp.), and emission was collected on a dual-view 505 dcxr D465/30m (CFP) HQ535/30m (YFP) (Optical Insights, LLC). Images were collected every 3 s and stored on the computer. Using a custom-made Visual Basic (vb6.0) program, the images were imported and analyzed. Following a threshold step, background regions were determined and the background was measured and subtracted from the images. Cells were traced with a fixed threshold and the mean fluorescence level of CFP and YFP of the whole cells was measured. CFP leak-through was subtracted from the YFP values (leak-through factor was 0.84 and was established in cells expressing only CFP) and the YFP value was multiplied by a fixed factor which was determined at the onset of the experiment to achieve a YFP/CFP ratio of 1. FRET changes were measured as an offset of the initial value. For more details see Fig. S1.
Antibody-based PIP2 assay
PIP2 antibody was purchased from Assay Designs, Inc. Pictures were taken using 60x NA1.4 infinity-corrected optics on a microscope (model IX170; Olympus) supplemented with a computer-driven cooled CCD camera. IPLab Spectrum software (VayTek) was used to collect images, and exposure times were kept constant. Digital images were linearly converted in NIH ImageJ and analyzed using a customized macro. The macro averages the fluorescence intensity in 29 annuli, ranging from 1.1 µm outside the cell periphery and extending approximate 6 µm inside the cell (consecutive annuli are 0.22 µm apart from each other). The averaged fluorescence intensity of the first 1 µm inside the cell was used to represent the membrane PIP2 changes. For every condition, at least 30 cells were analyzed.
Membrane fractionation
A 100-mm plate of MTLn3 cells at
90% confluence was lysed with 100 µl of ice-cold lysis buffer (50 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 300 mM NaCl, 5 mM EGTA, 20 mM DTT, 2% Triton X-100, 1x protease inhibitor mixture, and 50 mM NaF). Cell lysates were collected after incubating the lysates on ice for 30 min. The harvested cell lysate was mixed with 60% OptiPrep (AXIS-SHIELD PoC AS) to yield 40% OptiPrep final. The lysate containing 40% OptiPrep was transferred to the bottom of a centrifuge tube. 1 ml 30% OptiPrep was added carefully on top of 40% OptiPrep lysate to avoid disrupting the interface. 300 µl of 5% OptiPrep was added carefully on top of 30% OptiPrep. Tubes were centrifuged for 12–14 h at 4°C in a rotor at 100,000 g (TLS55; Beckman Coulter). Gradient fractions (150 µl) were collected and cofilin content was analyzed by immunoblotting. To analyze the amount of PIP2, 1 µl of each gradient fraction was dot blotted onto nitrocellulose and dried for 1 h. Dot blot was then probed with a monoclonal antibody raised against PI(4,5)P2 (Assay Designs). Densitometry analysis was done in ImageJ (W.S. Rasband, NIH, Bethesda, MD; http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/). The amount of cofilin or PIP2 in the low-density fraction was normalized against the total amount of cofilin in the lysate.
Cofilin activity assay
The relative cofilin-severing activity was quantified using a slightly modified version of the established microscopy severing assay (Chan et al., 2000; Ichetovkin et al., 2000). In brief, MTLn3 cell lysates were prepared by lysing cells (3 x 107 cells/ml) in lysis buffer at different times after EGF stimulation. Rhodamine- and biotin-labeled F-actin were prepared by incubating 0.4 µM rhodamine-labeled actin, 0.2 µM biotin-labeled actin, and 1.4 µM unlabeled actin in polymerization buffer and 0.2 µM phalloidin for no more than 1.5 h at room temperature. A flow chamber precoated with 0.5% nitrocellulose in amylacetate was perfused in biotin antibody for 5 min. Rhodamine/biotin-labeled F-actin was diluted 30 times to perfuse in the flow chamber. The severing of actin filaments by cell lysates prepared from MTLn3 cells was observed under a TIRF microscope. Due to the cross-linking of filaments to the solid surface, the filaments are stable indefinitely, and 20 min was used routinely as the control check time to see if any filament severing occurred in the absence of cofilin. Filament numbers were quantified in ImageJ. The relative cofilin activity was measured by dividing the number of filaments 5–10 min after adding the lysates by the number of filaments before adding cell lysates in the same field. Confocal experiments using function-blocking cofilin antibodies were done to confirm that all severing activity was due to cofilin.
Sensitized emission
Sensitized emission was calculated from confocal GFP and mCherry images using a highly corrected algorithm as recently described (van Rheenen et al., 2004), in a custom-made Visual Basic program. In short, three images were collected with a confocal microscope (TCS SP2 AOBS; Leica) with 60x oil immersion optics at 25°C; a GFP image excited at 488 nm (488nmGFP), a mCherry image excited at 488 nm (488nmmCherry), and a mCherry image excited at 560 nm (560nmmCherry). Upon background subtraction, sensitized emission (FRET(sens)) was calculated as follows:
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is the correction factor for mCherry fluorescence excitation at 488 nm and detected in the 488nmGFP channel, β is the leakthrough of GFP in the 488nmmCherry channel,
that for leak-through of sensitized emission back into the 488nmGFP channel, and
relates mCherry fluorescence detected in the 488nmGFP channel to the mCherry fluorescence detected in the 488nmmCherry channel. The
, β,
, and
correction factors were determined on-line from cells expressing either GFP or mCherry fluorescence proteins alone, present on the same coverslip (for more details see van Rheenen et al., 2004). For each image, the correction factors were redetermined to correct for laser fluctuations. Apparent FRET efficiencies (Ed and Ea) were obtained by relating FRET (sens) to the GFP or mCherry image, respectively. To compare independent measurements of Ea, Ea was divided by the
factor (van Rheenen et al., 2004). Regions of interest such as the PM were determined by a threshold step in the mCherry image. FRET values were calculated by applying the same algorithms on the raw mean data of the region of interest.
Acceptor photobleaching experiments
Donor and acceptor confocal images were collected before and after photobleaching of the acceptor. In a custom-made Visual Basic program, the post-bleached donor image was corrected for imaging-bleaching and the gain in donor and the loss in acceptor fluorescence were determined at the cell periphery. FRET was calculated by relating the gain of donor fluorescence to the total amount post-bleach acceptor fluorescence. All FRET calculations were performed on the mean values of regions of interest of the periphery of the cell. No significant photo conversion of the acceptor was observed during photobleaching.
Colocalization analysis
Colocalization analyses were performed on the first 1 µm of a cell. Cells were precisely traced on phase-contrast images. Pixels along the perimeter were measured for intensity correlation. The perimeter was inset by one pixel and measured. This was repeated iteratively to provide Pearson's coefficient from the outer edge of the cell toward the center at 0.22-µm steps for the first 1 µm of the cell. Pearson's correlation coefficients (r) were calculated as previously described (Song et al., 2006) using the following equation:
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For scatterplot analyses, the first 1 µm of the cell was precisely traced on the fluorescent images and the analysis was performed in a custom-made Visual Basic program, where the pixel intensity of the first image (image A) was plotted against the pixel intensity of the second image (image B). However, because of small misalignments in filter sets, the image of the second probe (image B) can have a pixel shift relative to the image of the first probe (image A). Before analysis, images were corrected for these pixel shifts as follows: The spatial correlation for pixels in which the gray value in both image A and B is >0 were analyzed with the Pearson's correlation coefficient. Then, image B was moved one pixel to the left, and the correlation was recalculated. If a misalignment in filter resulted in a pixel shift to the right, image B that is moved one pixel to the left will have a higher spatial correlation with image A then the non-moved image B. If this was true, image B was moved permanently. The correlation was calculated for a move of image B to the left, right, up, or down. This procedure was repeated iteratively until the coefficient no longer increased.
Online supplemental material
Figure S1 explains the PIP2 FRET assay. Figure S2 shows the specificity of PIP2 antibodies used in this study. Figure S3 explains why the Pearson's correlation coefficient is insensitive to relative changes in images. Figure S4 shows cofilin membrane FRET controls. Figure S5 explains the loss of PIP2 upon rapamycin addition. Video 1 shows the lamellipod increase upon rapamycin treatment. Online supplemental material is available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200706206/DC1.
| Acknowledgments |
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J. van Rheenen was supported by a fellowship from the Dutch Cancer Society and the Cell Migration Consortium Grant No, U54GM064346; J.S. Condeelis by GM38511; and J.M. Backer by CA100324. This project was supported in part by the Cell Migration Consortium grant no. U54GM064346 from NIGMS: In particular, the Consortium supported the development of the cofilin FRET-biosensor.
Submitted: 28 June 2007
Accepted: 19 November 2007
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