Evolutionarily conserved sites in yeast tropomyosin function in cell polarity, transport and contractile ring formation.

Biol Open

Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA

Published: July 2015

Tropomyosin is a coiled-coil protein that binds and regulates actin filaments. The tropomyosin gene in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, cdc8, is required for formation of actin cables, contractile rings, and polar localization of actin patches. The roles of conserved residues were investigated in gene replacement mutants. The work validates an evolution-based approach to identify tropomyosin functions in living cells and sites of potential interactions with other proteins. A cdc8 mutant with near-normal actin affinity affects patch polarization and vacuole fusion, possibly by affecting Myo52p, a class V myosin, function. The presence of labile residual cell attachments suggests a delay in completion of cell division and redistribution of cell patches following cytokinesis. Another mutant with a mild phenotype is synthetic negative with GFP-fimbrin, inferring involvement of the mutated tropomyosin sites in interaction between the two proteins. Proteins that assemble in the contractile ring region before actin do so in a mutant cdc8 strain that cannot assemble condensed actin rings, yet some cells can divide. Of general significance, LifeAct-GFP negatively affects the actin cytoskeleton, indicating caution in its use as a biomarker for actin filaments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4542287PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.012609DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

contractile ring
8
actin
8
actin filaments
8
tropomyosin
5
evolutionarily conserved
4
conserved sites
4
sites yeast
4
yeast tropomyosin
4
tropomyosin function
4
cell
4

Similar Publications

In Vitro Formation of Actin Ring in the Fission Yeast Cell Extracts.

Cytoskeleton (Hoboken)

January 2025

Department of Life Science, Faculty of Science, Gakushuin University, Mejiro, Tokyo, Japan.

Cytokinesis in animal and fungal cells requires the contraction of actomyosin-based contractile rings formed in the division cortex of the cell during late mitosis. However, the detailed mechanism remains incompletely understood. Here, we aim to develop a novel cell-free system by encapsulating cell extracts obtained from fission yeast cells within lipid vesicles, which subsequently leads to the formation of a contractile ring-like structure inside the vesicles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Munc13/UNC-13 family protein Ync13 is essential for septum integrity and cytokinesis in fission yeast. To further explore the mechanism of Ync13 functions, spontaneous suppressors of mutants, which can suppress the colony-formation defects and lysis phenotype of mutant cells, are isolated and characterized. One of the suppressor mutants, -, shows defects in the cytokinetic contractile ring constriction, septation, and daughter-cell separation, similar to mutant.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Conventional two-dimensional (2D) cardiomyocyte differentiation protocols create cells with limited maturity, which impairs their predictive capacity and has driven interest in three-dimensional (3D) engineered cardiac tissue models of varying maturity and scalability. Cardiac spheroids are attractive high-throughput models that have demonstrated improved functional and transcriptional maturity over conventional 2D differentiations. However, these 3D models still tend to have limited contractile and electrical maturity compared to highly engineered cardiac tissues; hence, we incorporated a library of conductive polymer microfibers in cardiac spheroids to determine if fiber properties could accelerate maturation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: Cell division is a fundamental process ensuring the perpetuation of all cellular life forms. Archaea of the order Sulfolobales divide using a simpler version of the eukaryotic endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) machinery, composed of three ESCRT-III homologs (ESCRT-III, -III-1, and -III-2), AAA+ ATPase Vps4 and an archaea-specific component CdvA. Here, we clarify how these components act sequentially to drive the division of the hyperthermophilic archaeon .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Non-conventional snake venom toxins, such as WTX from the cobra Naja kaouthia, are three-finger proteins containing a fifth disulfide bond in the N-terminal polypeptide loop I and inhibiting α7 and muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). Because the central polypeptide loop II of non-conventional toxins plays an important role in their biological activity, we synthesized several WTX loop II fragments with two cysteine residues added at the N- and C-termini and oxidized to form a disulfide bond. The inhibition by peptides of several nAChRs subtypes was investigated using different methods and the effects of peptides on the rat arterial pressure and heart rate were analyzed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!