AI Article Synopsis

  • Actomyosin networks are crucial for coordinated cell contractions, and the C. elegans spermatheca serves as a model to study their organization.
  • The protein FLN-1/filamin is essential for creating a stable arrangement of actomyosin fibers; without it, fibers detach and aggregate inappropriately.
  • The absence of filamin disrupts not only actin and myosin distribution but also affects nuclear positioning and organelle organization, highlighting its role in cellular structure maintenance.

Article Abstract

Actomyosin networks are organized in space, direction, size, and connectivity to produce coordinated contractions across cells. We use the C. elegans spermatheca, a tube composed of contractile myoepithelial cells, to study how actomyosin structures are organized. FLN-1/filamin is required for the formation and stabilization of a regular array of parallel, contractile, actomyosin fibers in this tissue. Loss of fln-1 results in the detachment of actin fibers from the basal surface, which then accumulate along the cell junctions and are stabilized by spectrin. In addition, actin and myosin are captured at the nucleus by the linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton complex (LINC) complex, where they form large foci. Nuclear positioning and morphology, distribution of the endoplasmic reticulum and the mitochondrial network are also disrupted. These results demonstrate that filamin is required to prevent large actin bundle formation and detachment, to prevent excess nuclear localization of actin and myosin, and to ensure correct positioning of organelles.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7926293PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cm.21633DOI Listing

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