| Literature DB >> 30709916 |
Udo N Onwubiko1, Paul J Mlynarczyk2, Bin Wei1, Julius Habiyaremye1, Amanda Clack1, Steven M Abel2, Maitreyi E Das3.
Abstract
During cytokinesis, fission yeast coordinates actomyosin ring constriction with septum ingression, resulting in concentric furrow formation by a poorly defined mechanism. We report that Schizosaccharomyces pombe cells lacking the Cdc42 activator Gef1, combined with an activated allele of the formin, Cdc12, display non-concentric furrowing. Non-concentrically furrowing cells display uneven distribution of the scaffold Cdc15 along the ring. This suggests that, after ring assembly, uniform Cdc15 distribution along the ring enables proper furrow formation. We find that, after assembly, Cdc15 is recruited to the ring in an Arp2/3 complex-dependent manner and is decreased in the activated cdc12 mutant. Cdc15 at cortical endocytic patches shows increased levels and extended lifetimes in gef1 and activated cdc12 mutants. We hypothesize endocytosis helps recruit Cdc15 to assembled rings; uneven Cdc15 distribution at the ring occurs when endocytic patches contain increased Cdc15 levels and the patch-association rate is slow. Based on this, we developed a mathematical model that captures experimentally observed Cdc15 distributions along the ring. We propose that, at the ring, Gef1 and endocytic events promote uniform Cdc15 organization to enable proper septum ingression and concentric furrow formation.Entities:
Keywords: Actomyosin ring; Arp2/3 complex; Cdc15; Cdc42 GEF; Endocytosis; Septum
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30709916 PMCID: PMC6432710 DOI: 10.1242/jcs.223776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Sci ISSN: 0021-9533 Impact factor: 5.285