AI Article Synopsis

  • Diffusion of macromolecules in the cytoplasm is crucial for cellular processes, but how it's regulated based on cell size is not well understood.
  • Researchers studied how the size of fission yeast cells influences the diffusion of genetically-encoded 40 nm nanoparticles (cytGEMs) within the cytoplasm.
  • Their findings revealed that smaller cells have decreased diffusion coefficients for cytGEMs, while larger cells show increased diffusion, potentially due to differences in DNA-to-cytoplasm ratio and specific changes in cell proteomes based on size.

Article Abstract

Diffusion in the cytoplasm can greatly impact cellular processes, yet regulation of macromolecular diffusion remains poorly understood. There is increasing evidence that cell size affects the density and macromolecular composition of the cytoplasm. Here, we studied whether cell size affects diffusion at the scale of macromolecules tens of microns in diameter. We analyzed the diffusive motions of intracellular genetically-encoded multimeric 40 nm nanoparticles (cytGEMs) in the cytoplasm of the fission yeast . Using cell size mutants, we showed that cytGEMs diffusion coefficients decreased in smaller cells and increased in larger cells. This increase in diffusion in large cells may be due to a decrease in the DNA-to-Cytoplasm ratio, as diffusion was not affected in large multinucleate cytokinesis mutants. In investigating the underlying causes of altered cytGEMs diffusion, we found that the proteomes of large and small cells exhibited size-specific changes, including the sub-scaling of ribosomal proteins in large cells. Comparison with a similar dataset from human cells revealed that features of size-dependent proteome remodeling were conserved. These studies demonstrate that cell size is an important parameter in determining the biophysical properties and the composition of the cytoplasm.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11463555PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.21.613766DOI Listing

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