aktinpolymerisation
Aktinpolymerisation is the process by which globular actin (G-actin) monomers assemble into filamentous actin (F-actin). In eukaryotic cells, actin polymerisation is ATP-dependent: G-actin binds ATP, incorporates into filaments, and ATP is hydrolysed after incorporation, influencing filament stability and turnover.
The assembly proceeds through nucleation, elongation, and steady state. Nucleation is rate-limiting and uses actin-nucleating factors
Actin dynamics are regulated by binding proteins. Profilin delivers ATP-actin to growing filaments; thymosin beta-4 sequesters
Functions of actin polymerisation include cell migration, maintenance of cell shape, cytokinesis, endocytosis, and vesicle trafficking.
Research uses pharmacological agents that perturb actin dynamics to study cellular processes. Dysregulation of actin polymerisation