actin cables
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2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandra G. González-Gutiérrez ◽  
Antonia Gutiérrez-Mora ◽  
Jorge Verdín ◽  
Benjamín Rodríguez-Garay

Asparagaceae’s large embryo sacs display a central cell nucleus polarized toward the chalaza, which means the sperm nucleus that fuses with it during double fertilization migrates an atypical long distance before karyogamy. Because of the size and inverted polarity of the central cell in Asparagaceae, we hypothesize that the second fertilization process is supported by an F-actin machinery different from the short-range F-actin structures observed in Arabidopsis and other plant models. Here, we analyzed the F-actin dynamics of Agave inaequidens, a classical Asparagaceae, before, during, and after the central cell fertilization. Several parallel F-actin cables, spanning from the central cell nucleus to the micropylar pole, and enclosing the vacuole, were observed. As fertilization progressed, a thick F-actin mega-cable traversing the vacuole appeared, connecting the central cell nucleus with the micropylar pole near the egg cell. This mega-cable wrapped the sperm nucleus in transit to fuse with the central cell nucleus. Once karyogamy finished, and the endosperm started to develop, the mega-cable disassembled, but new F-actin structures formed. These observations suggest that Asparagaceae, and probably other plant species with similar embryo sacs, evolved an F-actin machinery specifically adapted to support the migration of the fertilizing sperm nucleus within a large-sized and polarity-inverted central cell.


2021 ◽  
pp. ASN.2021020182
Author(s):  
Chengqing Qu ◽  
Robyn Roth ◽  
Pongpratch Puapatanakul ◽  
Charles Loitman ◽  
Dina Hammad ◽  
...  

Background Actin stress fibers are abundant in cultured cells, but little is known about them in vivo. In podocytes, much evidence suggests that mechanobiologic mechanisms underlie podocyte shape and adhesion in health and in injury, with structural changes to actin stress fibers potentially responsible for pathologic changes to cell morphology. However, this hypothesis is difficult to rigorously test in vivo due to challenges with visualization. A technology to image the actin cytoskeleton at high resolution is needed to better understand the role of structures such as actin stress fibers in podocytes. Methods We developed the first visualization technique capable of resolving the three-dimensional cytoskeletal network in mouse podocytes in detail while definitively identifying the proteins that comprise this network. This technique integrates membrane extraction, focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy, and machine learning image segmentation. Results Using isolated mouse glomeruli from healthy animals, we observed actin cables and intermediate filaments linking the interdigitated podocyte foot processes to newly described contractile actin structures located at the periphery of the podocyte cell body. Actin cables within foot processes formed a continuous, mesh-like, electron-dense sheet that incorporated the slit diaphragms. Conclusions Our new technique revealed, for the first time, the detailed three-dimensional organization of actin networks in healthy podocytes. In addition to being consistent with the gel compression hypothesis, which posits that foot processes connected by slit diaphragms act together to counterbalance the hydrodynamic forces across the glomerular filtration barrier, our data provide insight into how podocytes respond to mechanical cues from their surrounding environment.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cierra N Sing ◽  
Enrique J Garcia ◽  
Thomas Lipkin ◽  
Thomas Huckaba ◽  
Catherine A Tsang ◽  
...  

In yeast, actin cables are F-actin bundles that are essential for cell division through their function as tracks for cargo movement from mother to daughter cell. Actin cables also affect yeast lifespan by promoting transport and inheritance of higher-functioning mitochondria to daughter cells. Here, we report that actin cable stability declines with age. Our genome-wide screen for genes that affect actin cable stability identified the open reading frame YKL075C. Deletion of YKL075C results in increases in actin cable stability and abundance, mitochondrial fitness, and replicative lifespan. Transcriptome analysis revealed a role for YKL075C in regulating branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) metabolism. Consistent with this, modulation of BCAA metabolism or decreasing leucine levels promotes actin cable stability and function in mitochondrial quality control. Our studies support a role for actin stability in yeast lifespan, and demonstrate that this process is controlled by BCAA and a previously uncharacterized ORF YKL075C, which we refer to as actin, aging and nutrient modulator protein 1 (AAN1).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandro Michael Meier ◽  
Ana-Maria Farcas ◽  
Anil Kumar ◽  
Mahdiye Ijavi ◽  
Robert Theofanis Bill ◽  
...  

Microtubule plus-end tracking proteins (+TIPs) control microtubule specialization and are as such essential notably during eukaryotic cell division. Here, we investigated interactions and functions of the budding yeast Kar9 network consisting of the core +TIPs components Kar9 (functional homologue of APC, MACF, and SLAIN), Bim1 (orthologue of EB1), and Bik1 (orthologue of CLIP-170). Our data indicate that a redundant, multivalent web of interactions links the three +TIPs together to form a "Kar9 body" at the tip of a single cytoplasmic microtubule. They further suggest that this body is a liquid-like condensate, allowing it to persist on both growing and shrinking microtubule tips, and functions as a mechanical coupling device between microtubules and actin cables during mitosis. Our study underlines the power of dissecting the web of low-affinity interactions driving liquid-liquid phase separation of proteins in order to demonstrate the importance and establish the functional roles of condensation processes in vivo.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (16) ◽  
pp. 8989
Author(s):  
Anna Hollósi ◽  
Katalin Pászty ◽  
Miklós Kellermayer ◽  
Guillaume Charras ◽  
Andrea Varga

Mechanical forces acting on cell–cell adhesion modulate the barrier function of endothelial cells. The actively remodeled actin cytoskeleton impinges on cell–cell adhesion to counteract external forces. We applied stress on endothelial monolayers by mechanical stretch to uncover the role of BRAF in the stress-induced response. Control cells responded to external forces by organizing and stabilizing actin cables in the stretched cell junctions. This was accompanied by an increase in intercellular gap formation, which was prevented in BRAF knockdown monolayers. In the absence of BRAF, there was excess stress fiber formation due to the enhanced reorganization of actin fibers. Our findings suggest that stretch-induced intercellular gap formation, leading to a decrease in barrier function of blood vessels, can be reverted by BRAF RNAi. This is important when the endothelium experiences changes in external stresses caused by high blood pressure, leading to edema, or by immune or cancer cells in inflammation or metastasis.


2021 ◽  
pp. mbc.E20-05-0277
Author(s):  
Kristi E. Miller ◽  
Joseph O. Magliozzi ◽  
Noelle A. Picard ◽  
James B. Moseley

Polarized morphogenesis is achieved by targeting or inhibiting growth at distinct regions. Rod-shaped fission yeast cells grow exclusively at their ends by restricting exocytosis and secretion to these sites. This growth pattern implies the existence of mechanisms that prevent exocytosis and growth along non-growing cell sides. We previously identified a set of 50-100 megadalton-sized node structures along the sides of fission yeast cells that contain the interacting proteins Skb1 and Slf1. Here, we show that Skb1-Slf1 nodes contain the syntaxin-like SNARE Psy1, which mediates exocytosis in fission yeast. Psy1 localizes in a diffuse pattern at cell tips where it likely promotes exocytosis and growth, but Psy1 is sequestered in Skb1-Slf1 nodes at cell sides where growth does not occur. Mutations that prevent node assembly or inhibit Psy1 localization to nodes lead to aberrant exocytosis at cell sides and increased cell width. Genetic results indicate that this Psy1 node mechanism acts in parallel to actin cables and Cdc42 regulation. Our work suggests that sequestration of syntaxin-like Psy1 at non-growing regions of the cell cortex reinforces cell morphology by restricting exocytosis to proper sites of polarized growth.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandra G Gonzalez-Gutierrez ◽  
Antonia Gutierrez-Mora ◽  
Jorge Verdin ◽  
Benjamin Rodriguez-Garay

Asparagaceae's large embryo sacs display a central cell nucleus polarized toward the chalaza, which means the sperm nucleus that fuses it during double fertilization migrates a long distance before karyogamy. Because of the size and inverted polarity of the central cell in Asparagaceae, we hypothesize that the second fertilization process is supported by F-actin structures different from the short-range aster-like ones observed in Arabidopsis. Here, we analyzed the F-actin dynamics of Agave inaequidens, a typical Asparagaceae, before, during, and after central cell fertilization. Several parallel F-actin cables emerging from the nucleus within the central cell, enclosing the vacuole, and reaching the micropylar pole were observed. As fertilization progressed, a thick F-actin mega-cable traversing the vacuole appeared, connecting the central cell nucleus with the micropylar pole near the egg cell. This mega-cable wrapped the sperm nucleus in transit to fuse the central cell one. Once karyogamy finished, the mega-cable disassembled, but new F-actin structures formed during the endosperm development. These observations suggest that Asparagaceae, and probably other plant species with similar embryo sacs, evolved an F-actin machinery specifically adapted to support the migration of the fertilizing sperm nucleus within a large-sized and polarity-inverted central cell.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shane G McInally ◽  
Jane Kondev ◽  
Bruce L Goode

How cells tune the size of their subcellular parts to scale with cell size is a fundamental question in cell biology. Until now, most studies on the size control of organelles and other subcellular structures have focused on scaling relationships with cell volume, which can be explained by limiting pool mechanisms. Here, we uncover a distinct scaling relationship with cell length rather than volume, revealed by mathematical modeling and quantitative imaging of yeast actin cables. The extension rate of cables decelerates as they approach the rear of the cell, until cable length matches cell length. Further, the deceleration rate scales with cell length. These observations are quantitatively explained by a 'balance-point' model, which stands in contrast to the limiting pool mechanisms and that senses the linear dimensions of the cell.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlin C. Devitt ◽  
Chanjae Lee ◽  
Rachael M. Cox ◽  
Ophelia Papoulas ◽  
José Alvarado ◽  
...  

The dynamic control of the actin cytoskeleton is a key aspect of essentially all animal cell movements. Experiments in single migrating cells and in vitro systems have provided an exceptionally deep understanding of actin dynamics. However, we still know relatively little of how these systems are tuned in cell-type specific ways, for example in the context of collective cell movements that sculpt the early embryo. Here, we provide an analysis of the actin severing and depolymerization machinery during vertebrate gastrulation, with a focus on Twinfilin1 (Twf1). We find that Twf1 is essential for convergent extension, and loss of Twf1 results in a failure of lamellipodial dynamics and polarity. Moreover, Twf1 loss results in a failure to assemble polarized cytoplasmic actin cables essential for convergent extension. These data provide an in vivo complement to our more-extensive understanding of Twf1 action in vitro and provide new links between the core machinery of actin regulation and specialized cell behaviors of embryonic morphogenesis.


Author(s):  
Liang Ning ◽  
Hani Y Suleiman ◽  
Jeffrey H. Miner

Synaptopodin (Synpo) is an actin-associated protein in podocyte foot processes. By generating mice that completely lack Synpo, we previously showed that Synpo is dispensable for normal kidney function. However, the lack of Synpo worsened Adriamycin nephropathy, indicating a protective role for Synpo in injured podocytes. Here we investigated whether the lack of Synpo directly impacts a genetic disease, Alport syndrome (AS), because Synpo is reduced in the podocytes of affected humans and mice; whether this is merely an association or pathogenic is unknown. We used Col4a5 mutant mice that model X-linked AS, showing glomerular basement membrane (GBM) abnormalities, eventual foot process effacement, and progression to ESKD. We intercrossed mice carrying mutations in Synpo and Col4a5 to produce doubly mutant mice. Urine and tissue were taken at select time points to evaluate albuminuria, histopathology, and glomerular capillary wall composition and ultrastructure. The lack of Synpo in Col4a5-/Y, Col4a5-/-, or Col4a5+/- Alport mice led to acceleration of disease progression, including more severe proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis. The absence of Synpo attenuated the shift of myosin IIA from the podocyte cell body and major processes to the actin cables near the GBM in the areas of effacement. We speculate that this is mechanistically associated with enhanced loss of podocytes due to easier detachment from the GBM. We conclude that Synpo deletion exacerbates the disease phenotype in Alport mice, revealing the podocyte actin cytoskeleton as a target for therapy in patients with AS.


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