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Portland Press, Biochemical Journal, 2(274), p. 421-425, 1991

DOI: 10.1042/bj2740421

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Effects of lithium ions on actin polymerization in the presence of magnesium ions

Journal article published in 1991 by R. Colombo, A. Milzani, P. Contini, I. Dalle Donne ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

In spite of the abundant literature, questions on the biological action of Li+ are far from being answered. In the present paper we demonstrate that modification of the salt composition of the medium for actin polymerization, by gradually replacing K+ with Li+, leads to a dose-related change in the time course of actin assembly. The presence of Li+ influences actin polymerization in vitro by enhancing nucleation and decreasing critical monomer concentration at steady state. Furthermore, Li+ stabilizes actin polymers mainly by lowering the absolute value of the dissociation rate constant (K-) and shifting (towards lower values of actin monomer concentrations) the range of G-actin concentrations in which filament-subunit flux can occur. The influence of Li+ on actin and tubulin polymerization in vitro suggests that cytoskeletal structures could be some of the cytoplasmic targets of this ion.