AI Article Synopsis

  • - Centrioles are essential organelles in eukaryotic cells that play a crucial role in forming cilia and during cell division.
  • - In the study of Naegleria amoebae, researchers observed how these organisms rapidly transition from no centrioles to two; the first centriole is formed independently (de novo) and the second is formed next to the first through a process called mentored assembly.
  • - The findings suggest that both methods of centriole assembly (de novo and mentored) are ancient and conserved across eukaryotes, fulfilling different but complementary roles in regulating centriole formation.

Article Abstract

Centrioles are eukaryotic organelles whose number and position are critical for cilia formation and mitosis. Many cell types assemble new centrioles next to existing ones ("templated" or mentored assembly). Under certain conditions, centrioles also form without pre-existing centrioles (de novo). The synchronous differentiation of Naegleria amoebae to flagellates represents a unique opportunity to study centriole assembly, as nearly 100% of the population transitions from having no centrioles to having two within minutes. Here, we find that Naegleria forms its first centriole de novo, immediately followed by mentored assembly of the second. We also find both de novo and mentored assembly distributed among all major eukaryote lineages. We therefore propose that both modes are ancestral and have been conserved because they serve complementary roles, with de novo assembly as the default when no pre-existing centriole is available, and mentored assembly allowing precise regulation of number, timing, and location of centriole assembly.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cm.21284DOI Listing

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