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Characterization of brain-cytoplasmic actin proprieties

Master 2 - Team "Neurocytoskeleton Dynamics and Structure"

Internship

Objectives

This project aims to study the dynamic properties of brain-purified actin and to characterize how various nucleators affect its behavior, providing insight into the regulation of neuronal actin and, more broadly, into the role of cytoplasmic actin in cells.

Abstract

The cell cytoskeleton, and actin in particular, regulates major biological functions such as cell differentiation, division and migration. While actin is encoded by 6 different genes in humans, most of the data available to date on this protein comes from actin expressed in muscles. Recent unpublished data obtained in the lab suggest that cytoplasmic actin found in the brain cannot coassemble with muscle actin, even though these proteins are over 93% identical. This represents a completely new and unexplored area of research. The project of this M2 internship is therefore to explore the specific dynamic properties of brain-cytoplasmic actin and its ability to be regulated by known nucleators such as formins and the Arp2/3 complex. This work will rely on biochemical approaches to purify the relevant proteins, combined with advanced microscopy techniques, including total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, to study actin dynamics.

Methods

Protein expression (bacteria) and purification (chromatography, affinity, polymerization strategy), protein labelling, SDS-PAGE. Imaging (video-microscopy and/or TIRF). Spectrofluorimetric method to monitor actin polymerization. Analysis (ImageJ/Fiji, R).

Reference

* Elie E et al. (2015) Tau co-organizes dynamic microtubule and actin networks. Sci Rep 5:9964
* Antkowiak et al. (2019) Sizes of actin networks sharing a common environment are determined by the relative rates of assembly PLoS Biol 17(6): e3000317.
* Bagdadi et al. (2024) Stable GDP-tubulin islands rescue dynamic microtubules. J Cell Biol (2024) 223 (8): e202307074.

Requested domains of expertise

Protein biochemistry, Photonic microscopy, Data analysis, Ability to follow protocols, Ability to write and present results.

Contact

A. Antkowiak (MCF)
Mail : %20adrien.antkowiakatuniv-grenoble-alpes.fr (adrien[dot]antkowiak[at]univ-grenoble-alpes[dot]fr)
Phone : +33 (0)4 56 52 05 65

Contacts

Pour les stages (master, licence, 3ème), envoyer directement un email au responsable de l'équipe que vous avez identifiée.

Pour une candidature spontanée pour un emploi, utilisez le formulaire de contact.

Submitted on February 8, 2024

Updated on June 23, 2025