EB-SUN, a New Microtubule Plus-End Tracking Protein in .

bioRxiv

Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology Chicago, IL 60611-3008.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microtubule regulation is crucial for oocyte development, with significant changes occurring in their stability and orientation throughout developmental stages.
  • Researchers discovered a new microtubule end-binding protein called EB-SUN, which is mainly expressed in the ovary and early embryos and works alongside another protein, EB1.
  • Knocking out EB-SUN decreases microtubule density and delays oocyte growth, and when combined with the reduction of EB1, it severely impacts egg viability, highlighting the different yet overlapping roles these proteins have in embryonic development.

Article Abstract

Microtubule (MT) regulation is essential for oocyte development. In , MT stability, polarity, abundance, and orientation undergo dynamic changes across developmental stages. In our effort to identify novel microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) that regulate MTs in the ovary, we identified a previously uncharacterized gene, CG18190, encoding a novel MT end-binding (EB) protein, which we propose to name EB-SUN. We show that EB-SUN colocalizes with EB1 at growing microtubule plus-ends in S2 cells. Tissue-specific and developmental expression profiles from Paralog Explorer reveal that EB-SUN is predominantly expressed in the ovary and early embryos, while EB1 is ubiquitously expressed. Furthermore, as early as oocyte determination, EB-SUN comets are highly concentrated in oocytes during oogenesis. EB-SUN knockout (KO) results in a decrease in MT density at the onset of mid-oogenesis (Stage 7) and delays oocyte growth during late mid-oogenesis (Stage 9). Combining EB-SUN KO with EB1 knockdown (KD) in germ cells significantly further reduced MT density at Stage 7. Notably, all eggs from EB-SUN KO/EB1 KD females fail to hatch, unlike single gene depletion, suggesting a functional redundancy between these two EB proteins during embryogenesis. Our findings indicate that EB-SUN and EB1 play distinct roles during early embryogenesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11419005PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.11.612465DOI Listing

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EB-SUN, a new microtubule plus-end tracking protein in .

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Microtubule (MT) regulation is essential for oocyte development. In , MT stability, polarity, abundance, and orientation undergo dynamic changes across developmental stages. In our effort to identify novel microtubule-associated proteins that regulate MTs in the ovary, we identified a previously uncharacterized gene, CG18190, which encodes a novel MT end-binding (EB) protein, which we propose to name EB-SUN.

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EB-SUN, a New Microtubule Plus-End Tracking Protein in .

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Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology Chicago, IL 60611-3008.

Article Synopsis
  • Microtubule regulation is crucial for oocyte development, with significant changes occurring in their stability and orientation throughout developmental stages.
  • Researchers discovered a new microtubule end-binding protein called EB-SUN, which is mainly expressed in the ovary and early embryos and works alongside another protein, EB1.
  • Knocking out EB-SUN decreases microtubule density and delays oocyte growth, and when combined with the reduction of EB1, it severely impacts egg viability, highlighting the different yet overlapping roles these proteins have in embryonic development.
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