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actincontaining

Actincontaining is an adjective used in cell and molecular biology to describe molecules, complexes, structures, or compartments that include actin as a constituent. Actin is a highly conserved, ATP-dependent globular protein that polymerizes into helical filaments forming microfilaments, essential for shaping the cytoskeleton, enabling movement, division, and intracellular trafficking.

In eukaryotic cells, actincontaining structures include microfilaments and higher-order networks such as lamellipodia and filopodia, the

Actincontaining complexes include actin and binding partners, such as myosin motors; vesicle-associated actin structures; actin-based motility

Methodologies used to study actincontaining structures include detection by phalloidin staining; visualization by fluorescence and confocal

In bacteria, actin-like proteins (MreB, ParM) share functional similarity but are distinct from eukaryotic actin; the

contractile
ring
of
cytokinesis,
and
stress
fibers.
These
filaments
interact
with
actin-binding
proteins
(e.g.,
profilin,
cofilin,
Arp2/3,
formins)
to
regulate
polymerization,
organization,
and
turnover.
in
intracellular
pathogens
like
Listeria
monocytogenes,
which
form
actin
comet
tails
to
move.
microscopy;
and
genetic
or
pharmacological
disruption
of
actin
polymerization
to
assess
effects
on
the
structures.
term
actincontaining
is
typically
reserved
for
true
actin-containing
assemblies
in
eukaryotes.