Intracellular actin cytoskeletal assembly and disassembly are tightly regulated by cell signaling mechanisms. Many
signal transduction systems use the actin cytoskeleton as a scaffold, holding them at or near the inner face of the peripheral
membrane. This subcellular location allows immediate responsiveness to transmembrane receptor action and the resulting cascade of signal-processing enzymes. Because actin monomers must be recycled to sustain high rates of actin-based motility during
chemotaxis, cell signalling is believed to activate cofilin, the actin-filament depolymerizing protein which binds to ADP-rich actin subunits nearest the filament's pointed-end and promotes filament fragmentation, with concomitant depolymerization in order to liberate actin monomers. In most animal cells, monomeric actin is bound to
profilin and
thymosin beta-4, both of which preferentially bind with one-to-one stoichiometry to ATP-containing monomers. Although thymosin beta-4 is strictly a monomer-sequestering protein, the behavior of profilin is far more complex. Profilin enhances the ability of monomers to assemble by stimulating the exchange of actin-bound ADP for solution-phase ATP to yield actin-ATP and ADP. Profilin is transferred to the leading edge by virtue of its
PIP2 binding site, and it employs its poly-L-proline binding site to dock onto end-tracking proteins. Once bound, profilin-actin-ATP is loaded into the monomer-insertion site of actoclampin motors. Another important component in filament formation is the
Arp2/3 complex, which binds to the side of an already existing filament (or "mother filament"), where it nucleates the formation of a new daughter filament at a 70-degree angle relative to the mother filament, effecting a fan-like branched filament network. Specialized unique actin cytoskeletal structures are found adjacent to the plasma membrane. Four remarkable examples include
red blood cells,
human embryonic kidney cells,
neurons, and
sperm cells. In red blood cells, a
spectrin-actin
hexagonal lattice is formed by interconnected short actin filaments. In human embryonic kidney cells, the cortical actin forms a scale-free
fractal structure. First found in neuronal
axons, actin forms periodic rings that are stabilized by spectrin and adducin and this ring structure was then found by He et al 2016 to occur in almost every neuronal type and
glial cells, across seemingly every animal taxon including
Caenorhabditis elegans,
Drosophila,
Gallus gallus and
Mus musculus. And in mammalian sperm, actin forms a
helical structure in the midpiece, i.e., the first segment of the
flagellum. ==Associated proteins==