| Literature DB >> 31035993 |
Ida Rishal1, Mike Fainzilber2.
Abstract
Individual cell types have characteristic sizes, suggesting that size sensing mechanisms may coordinate transcription, translation, and metabolism with cell growth rates. Two types of size-sensing mechanisms have been proposed: spatial sensing of the location or dimensions of a signal, subcellular structure or organelle; or titration-based sensing of the intracellular concentrations of key regulators. Here we propose that size sensing in animal cells combines both titration and spatial sensing elements in a dynamic mechanism whereby microtubule motor-dependent localization of RNA encoding importin β1 and mTOR, coupled with regulated local protein synthesis, enable cytoskeleton length sensing for cell growth regulation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31035993 PMCID: PMC6487511 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-019-0655-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Different models for cell size regulation. a The adder model enables size homeostasis without active size sensing. If large and small cells add a constant amount of cell mass in each division cycle, size variations will be reduced over multiple divisions to reach a uniform cell size in the population. b The sizer model postulates active size sensing, ensuring that cell division occurs only upon reaching a constant overall cell mass, hence maintaining size homeostasis in each cell cycle. c Post-mitotic cells such as neurons grow to characteristic size ranges after birth, without any subsequent cell division; hence, their growth must be constrained by sizer-like mechanisms or by extrinsic factors
Fig. 2A proposed size-sensing mechanism based on microtubule motors and local translation. Kinesin motors (K) transport mRNAs associated with the RNA binding protein nucleolin (Nucl) from the microtubule organizing center (MOC) to the periphery of the cell. Upon arrival at the cell cortex, nucleolin-associated mRNAs undergo local translation. Localized synthesis of importin β1 (β), mTOR, and other proteins enables formation of a retrogradely transported complex with an importin α bound to dynein (D). Restriction of the complex to the cell center shifts protein synthesis locales from the periphery to the center of the cell [57]. Computational modeling of this system, incorporating a still hypothetical negative feedback loop at the cell center (dashed lines), suggests that it generates a fluctuating retrograde signal, the frequency of which changes with cell length or size [51]. Definitive support for this model will require elucidating the nature of the negative feedback loop and determining how the frequency encoded signal affects biosynthesis and metabolism to regulate cell size