plastins
Plastins, also known as fimbrins, are a family of actin-binding proteins that organize the cytoskeleton by cross-linking actin filaments into tight, parallel bundles. In vertebrates, three plastin isoforms have been described: L-plastin (PLS1), T-plastin (PLST), and I-plastin (PLS3), encoded by the genes PLS1, PLS2, and PLS3 respectively. Structurally, plastins contain two actin-binding domains (ABD1 and ABD2), each consisting of calponin-homology domains, arranged to bridge actin filaments. A central regulatory region may include calcium-binding motifs in some isoforms, allowing calcium-dependent regulation of bundling activity. Phosphorylation and interactions with other cytoskeletal proteins can also influence localization and activity.
Expression and localization: L-plastin is primarily expressed in hematopoietic cells and some other tissues; T-plastin is
Function: Plastins organize actin networks by bundling filaments, contributing to cell shape, cortical stability, and mechanical
Evolution and research: Plastins belong to the fimbrin/plastin family of actin-bundling proteins and are conserved across