scholarly journals Construction of intracellular asymmetry and asymmetric division in Escherichia coli

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Da-Wei Lin ◽  
Yang Liu ◽  
Yue-Qi Lee ◽  
Po-Jiun Yang ◽  
Chia-Tse Ho ◽  
...  

AbstractThe design principle of establishing an intracellular protein gradient for asymmetric cell division is a long-standing fundamental question. While the major molecular players and their interactions have been elucidated via genetic approaches, the diversity and redundancy of natural systems complicate the extraction of critical underlying features. Here, we take a synthetic cell biology approach to construct intracellular asymmetry and asymmetric division in Escherichia coli, in which division is normally symmetric. We demonstrate that the oligomeric PopZ from Caulobacter crescentus can serve as a robust polarized scaffold to functionalize RNA polymerase. Furthermore, by using another oligomeric pole-targeting DivIVA from Bacillus subtilis, the newly synthesized protein can be constrained to further establish intracellular asymmetry, leading to asymmetric division and differentiation. Our findings suggest that the coupled oligomerization and restriction in diffusion may be a strategy for generating a spatial gradient for asymmetric cell division.

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 571-571
Author(s):  
William T. Tse ◽  
Livana Soetedjo ◽  
Timothy Lax ◽  
Lei Wang ◽  
Patrick J. Kennedy

Abstract Abstract 571 Asymmetric cell division, a proposed mechanism by which hematopoietic progenitor/stem cells (HPSC) maintain a balance between self-renewal and differentiation, has rarely been observed. Here we report the surprising finding that cultured mouse primary HPSC routinely generate pairs of daughter cells with 2 distinct phenotypes after a single round of cell division. Mouse bone marrow cells were cultured on chamber slides in the presence of stem cell factor (SCF). BrdU was added overnight to label dividing cells, and the cells were examined by immunofluorescence microscopy on day 2–4 of culture. In each BrdU+c-Kit+ divided cell doublet, c-Kit was invariably expressed in only 1 of the 2 daughter cells. In contrast, the other daughter cell was negative for c-Kit but positive for the asymmetric cell fate determinant Numb and mature myeloid markers Mac1, Gr1, M-CSFR and F4/80. Similarly, in each BrdU+Sca1+ cell doublet, 1 daughter cell was positive for the stem cell markers Sca1, c-Kit, CD150 and CD201, whereas the other cell was negative for these markers but positive for Numb and the mature myeloid markers. Analysis of 400 such doublets showed that the probability of HPSC undergoing asymmetric division was 99.5% (95% confidence interval 98–100%), indicating that asymmetric division in HPSC is in fact not rare but obligatory. In other model systems, it has been shown that activation of the atypical protein kinase C (aPKC)-Par6-Par3 cell polarity complex and realignment of the microtubule cytoskeleton precede asymmetric cell division. We asked whether similar steps are involved in the asymmetric division of HPSC. We found that c-Kit receptors, upon stimulation by SCF, rapidly capped at an apical pole next to the microtubule-organizing center, followed by redistribution to the same pole of the aPKC-Par6-Par3 complex and microtubule-stabilizing proteins APC, β-catenin, EB1 and IQGAP1. Strikingly, after cell division, the aPKC-Par6-Par3 complex and other polarity markers all partitioned only into the c-Kit+/Sca1+ daughter cell and not the mature daughter cell. The acetylated and detyrosinated forms of stabilized microtubules were also present only in the c-Kit+/Sca1+ cell, as were the Aurora A and Polo-like kinases, 2 mitotic kinases associated with asymmetric cell division. To understand how c-Kit activation triggers downstream polarization events, we studied the role of lipid rafts, cholesterol-enriched microdomains in the cell membrane that serve as organization centers of signaling complexes. These are enriched in phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate and annexin 2, putative attachment sites for the aPKC-Par6-Par3 complex. We found that SCF stimulation led to coalescence of lipid raft components at the site of the c-Kit cap, and treatment with a wide range of inhibitors that blocked lipid raft formation abrogated polarization of the aPKC-Par6-Par3 complex and division of the c-Kit+/Sca1+ cells. Because obligatory asymmetric division in cultured HPSC would prevent a net increase in their number, we sought a way to bypass its mechanism. We tested whether inhibition of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), a physiological antagonist of aPKC, would enhance aPKC activity and promote self-renewal of HPSC. Treatment of cultured HPSC with okadaic acid or calyculin, 2 well-characterized PP2A inhibitors, increased the percent of c-Kit+/Sca1+ cells undergoing symmetric division from 0% to 23.3% (p<0.001). In addition, small colonies comprised of symmetrically dividing cells uniformly positive for Sca1, c-Kit, CD150 and CD201 were noted in the culture. To functionally characterize the effect of PP2A inhibition, mouse bone marrow cells were cultured in the absence or presence of PP2A inhibitors and transplanted into irradiated congenic mice in a competitive repopulation assay. At 4–8 weeks post-transplant, the donor engraftment rate increased from ∼1 in mice transplanted with untreated cells to >30% in mice transplanted with PP2A inhibitor-treated cells. This dramatic increase indicates that PP2A inhibition can effectively perturb the mechanism of asymmetric cell division and promote the self-renewal of HPSC. In summary, our data showed that obligatory asymmetric cell division works to maintain a strict balance between self-renewal and differentiation in HPSC and pharmacological manipulation of the cell polarity machinery could potentially be used to expand HPSC for clinical use. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergi Junyent ◽  
Joshua C Reeves ◽  
James LA Szczerkowski1 ◽  
Clare L Garcin ◽  
Tung-Jui Trieu ◽  
...  

The Wnt-pathway is part of a signalling network that regulates many aspects of cell biology. Recently we discovered crosstalk between AMPA/Kainate-type ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) and the Wnt-pathway during the initial Wnt3a-interaction at the cytonemes of mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs). Here, we demonstrate that this crosstalk persists throughout the Wnt3a-response in ESCs. Both AMPA- and Kainate-receptors regulate early Wnt3a-recruitment, dynamics on the cell membrane, and orientation of the spindle towards a Wnt3a-source at mitosis. AMPA-receptors specifically are required for segregating cell fate components during Wnt3a-mediated asymmetric cell division (ACD). Using Wnt-pathway component knockout lines, we determine that Wnt co-receptor Lrp6 has particular functionality over Lrp5 in cytoneme formation, and in facilitating ACD. Both Lrp5 and 6, alongside pathway effector β-catenin act in concert to mediate the positioning of the dynamic interaction with, and spindle orientation to, a localized Wnt3a-source. Wnt-iGluR crosstalk may prove pervasive throughout embryonic and adult stem cell signalling.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Zhao ◽  
Samuel W. Duvall ◽  
Kimberly A. Kowallis ◽  
Dylan T. Tomares ◽  
Haley N. Petitjean ◽  
...  

AbstractAsymmetric cell division generates specialized daughter cells that play a variety of roles including tissue morphogenesis in eukaryotes and pathogenesis in bacteria. In the gram-negative bacteriumCaulobacter crescentus, asymmetric localization of two biochemically distinct signaling hubs at opposite cell poles provides the foundation for asymmetric cell division. Through a set of genetic, synthetic biology and biochemical approaches we have characterized the regulatory interactions between three scaffolding proteins. These studies have revealed that the scaffold protein PodJ functions as a central mediator for organizing the new cell signaling hub, including promoting bipolarization of the central developmental scaffold protein PopZ. In addition, we identified that the old pole scaffold SpmX serves as a negative regulator of PodJ subcellular accumulation. These two scaffold-scaffold regulatory interactions serve as the core of an integrated cell polarization circuit that is layered on top of the cell-cycle circuitry to coordinate cell differentiation and asymmetric cell division.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. 917-924 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Molinari ◽  
David L. Shis ◽  
Shyam P. Bhakta ◽  
James Chappell ◽  
Oleg A. Igoshin ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 883-897 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shao-Chen Sun ◽  
Nam-Hyung Kim

AbstractIn contrast to symmetric division in mitosis, mammalian oocyte maturation is characterized by asymmetric cell division that produces a large egg and a small polar body. The asymmetry results from oocyte polarization, which includes spindle positioning, migration, and cortical reorganization, and this process is critical for fertilization and the retention of maternal components for early embryo development. Although actin dynamics are involved in this process, the molecular mechanism underlying this remained unclear until the use of confocal microscopy and live cell imaging became widespread in recent years. Information obtained through a PubMed database search of all articles published in English between 2000 and 2012 that included the phrases “oocyte, actin, spindle migration,” “oocyte, actin, polar body,” or “oocyte, actin, asymmetric division” was reviewed. The actin nucleation factor actin-related protein 2/3 complex and its nucleation-promoting factors, formins and Spire, and regulators such as small GTPases, partitioning-defective/protein kinase C, Fyn, microRNAs, cis-Golgi apparatus components, myosin/myosin light-chain kinase, spindle stability regulators, and spindle assembly checkpoint regulators, play critical roles in asymmetric cell division in oocytes. This review summarizes recent findings on these actin-related regulators in mammalian oocyte asymmetric division and outlines a complete signaling pathway.


2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (11) ◽  
pp. 1530-1538 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony S. Eritano ◽  
Arturo Altamirano ◽  
Sarah Beyeler ◽  
Norma Gaytan ◽  
Mark Velasquez ◽  
...  

Asymmetric cell division is the primary mechanism to generate cellular diversity, and it relies on the correct partitioning of cell fate determinants. However, the mechanism by which these determinants are delivered and positioned is poorly understood, and the upstream signal to initiate asymmetric cell division is unknown. Here we report that the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is asymmetrically partitioned during mitosis in epithelial cells just before delamination and selection of a proneural cell fate in the early Drosophila embryo. At the start of gastrulation, the ER divides asymmetrically into a population of asynchronously dividing cells at the anterior end of the embryo. We found that this asymmetric division of the ER depends on the highly conserved ER membrane protein Jagunal (Jagn). RNA inhibition of jagn just before the start of gastrulation disrupts this asymmetric division of the ER. In addition, jagn-deficient embryos display defects in apical-basal spindle orientation in delaminated embryonic neuroblasts. Our results describe a model in which an organelle is partitioned asymmetrically in an otherwise symmetrically dividing cell population just upstream of cell fate determination and updates previous models of spindle-based selection of cell fate during mitosis.


1999 ◽  
Vol 181 (7) ◽  
pp. 1984-1993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory T. Marczynski

ABSTRACT Caulobacter crescentus exhibits cell-type-specific control of chromosome replication and DNA methylation. Asymmetric cell division yields a replicating stalked cell and a nonreplicating swarmer cell. The motile swarmer cell must differentiate into a sessile stalked cell in order to replicate and execute asymmetric cell division. This program of cell division implies that chromosome replication initiates in the stalked cell only once per cell cycle. DNA methylation is restricted to the predivisional cell stage, and since DNA synthesis produces an unmethylated nascent strand, late DNA methylation also implies that DNA near the replication origin remains hemimethylated longer than DNA located further away. In this report, both assumptions are tested with an engineered Tn5-based transposon, Tn5Ω-MP. This allows a sensitive Southern blot assay that measures fully methylated, hemimethylated, and unmethylated DNA duplexes. Tn5Ω-MP was placed at 11 sites around the chromosome and it was clearly demonstrated that Tn5Ω-MP DNA near the replication origin remained hemimethylated longer than DNA located further away. One Tn5Ω-MP placed near the replication origin revealed small but detectable amounts of unmethylated duplex DNA in replicating stalked cells. Extra DNA synthesis produces a second unmethylated nascent strand. Therefore, measurement of unmethylated DNA is a critical test of the “once and only once per cell cycle” rule of chromosome replication inC. crescentus. Fewer than 1 in 1,000 stalked cells prematurely initiate a second round of chromosome replication. The implications for very precise negative control of chromosome replication are discussed with respect to the bacterial cell cycle.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Roxann A. Lerma ◽  
T. J. Tidwell ◽  
Jesse L. Cahill ◽  
Eric S. Rasche ◽  
Gabriel F. Kuty Everett

Podophage Percy infectsCaulobacter crescentus, a Gram-negative bacterium that divides asymmetrically and is a commonly used model organism to study the cell cycle, asymmetric cell division, and cell differentiation. Here, we announce the sequence and annotated complete genome of the phiKMV-like podophage Percy and note its prominent features.


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