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cofiline

Cofilin, often spelled cofiline in some sources, is an actin-binding protein that participates in the remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton in eukaryotic cells. It belongs to the ADF/cofilin family, which also includes actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF). In vertebrates, two major isoforms exist: cofilin-1 (CFL1), expressed broadly, and cofilin-2 (CFL2), more restricted to muscle tissue.

Function: Cofilin binds to ADP-actin subunits within F-actin and induces filament severing and accelerated depolymerization, increasing

Regulation: The activity of cofilin is tightly controlled by phosphorylation at Ser3. Phosphorylation by LIM kinases

Biological roles: Cofilin-mediated actin turnover is essential for cell motility, chemotaxis, endocytosis, cytokinesis, and morphological changes

Clinical relevance: Dysregulation of cofilin signaling has been linked to cancer cell invasion and metastasis, neuronal

See also: ADF/cofilin family, actin cytoskeleton, LIMK, SSH phosphatases.

actin
turnover
and
generating
new
filament
ends
for
polymerization.
This
activity
is
modulated
by
cellular
signaling
pathways
and
by
the
nucleotide
state
of
actin.
(LIMK1
and
LIMK2)
inactivates
cofilin.
Dephosphorylation
by
phosphatases
such
as
SSH1L
reactivates
it.
Other
regulators
include
p21-activated
kinases,
14-3-3
proteins
that
sequester
phosphorylated
cofilin,
and
interactions
with
actin-binding
partners
like
AIP1,
coronin,
and
cortactin
that
can
enhance
severing.
in
developing
neurons.
In
neurons,
cofilin
activity
influences
growth
cone
dynamics
and
synaptic
plasticity.
damage
in
neurodegenerative
diseases,
and
aspects
of
synaptic
dysfunction.