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1.
In cytokinesis, the contractile ring constricts the cleavage furrow. However, the formation and properties of the contractile ring are poorly understood. Fimbrin has two actin-binding domains and two EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding motifs. Ca(2+) binding to the EF-hand motifs inhibits actin-binding activity. In Tetrahymena, fimbrin is localized in the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis. In a previous study, Tetrahymena fimbrin was purified with an F-actin affinity column. However, the purified Tetrahymena fimbrin was broken in to a 60 kDa fragment of a 70 kDa full length fimbrin. In this study, we investigated the properties of recombinant Tetrahymena fimbrin. In an F-actin cosedimentation assay, Tetrahymena fimbrin bound to F-actin and bundled it in a Ca(2+)-independent manner, with a K(d) of 0.3 micro M and a stoichiometry at saturation of 1:1.4 (Tetrahymena fimbrin: actin). In the presence of 1 molecule of Tetrahymena fimbrin to 7 molecules of actin, F-actin was bundled. Immunofluorecence microscopy showed that a dotted line of Tetrahymena fimbrin along the cleavage furrow formed a ring structure. The properties and localization of Tetrahymena fimbrin suggest that it bundles actin filaments in the cleavage furrow and plays an important role in contractile ring formation during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

2.
In the molecular mechanism of division plane determination and contractile ring formation, Tetrahymena 85kDa protein (p85) is localized to the presumptive division plane before the formation of the contractile ring. p85 directly interacts with Tetrahymena calmodulin (CaM) in a Ca2+-dependent manner, and p85 and CaM colocalize in the division furrow. A Ca2+/CaM inhibitor N-(6-Aminohexyl)-5-chloro-1-naphthalenesulfonamide HCI (W7) inhibits the direct interaction between p85 and Ca2+/CaM. W7 also inhibits the localization of p85 and CaM to the division plane, and the formation of the contractile ring and division furrow. In addition, p85 binds to G-actin in a Ca2+/CaM dependent manner, but does not bind F-actin. Tetrahymena profilin is localized to division furrow and binds Tetrahymena elongation factor-1alpha (EF-1alpha). EF-1alpha, which induces bundling of Tetrahymena F-actin, is also localized to the division furrow during cytokinesis. The evidence also indicates that Ca2+/CaM inhibits the F-actin-bundling activity of EF-1alpha, and that EF-1alpha and CaM colocalize in the division furrow. In this review, we propose that the Ca2+/CaM signal and its target protein p85 cooperatively regulate the determination of the division plane and the initiation of the contractile ring formation, and that profilin and a Ca2+/CaM-sensitive actin-bundling protein, EF-1alpha, play pivotal roles in regulating the organization of the contractile ring microfilaments.  相似文献   

3.
Tetrahymena contains a micronucleus and a macronucleus. The micronucleus divides with typical mitosis, while the macronucleus divides amitotically. Although the mechanism responsible for macronuclear division was previously unknown, we clarified the organization of microtubules during macronuclear division. The macronuclear microtubules dynamically changed their distribution in an organized way throughout the macronuclear division. The macronuclear microtubules and the cytoplasmic microtubules cooperatively carried out the macronuclear division. When the micronuclear division was finished, p85 appeared at the presumptive division plane prior to the cytokinesis. The p85 directly interacted with calmodulin in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner, and p85 and CaM colocalized to the division furrow during cytokinesis. Moreover, the Ca(2+)/CaM inhibitor, W7, inhibited the direct interaction between p85 and CaM, the localization of both proteins to the division plane, and the formation of the division furrow. Thus, Ca(2+)/CaM and p85 have important roles in initiation and progression of cytokinesis in Tetrahymena.  相似文献   

4.
Translation elongation factor 1 alpha (EF-1 alpha) catalyzes the GTP-dependent binding of amino-acyl-tRNA to ribosomes. We previously reported that Tetrahymena EF-1 alpha induced the formation of bundles of rabbit skeletal muscle filamentous actin (F-actin) as well as Tetrahymena F-actin [Kurasawa et al. (1996) Zool. Sci. (Tokyo) 13, 371-375], and that Ca(2+)/calmodulin (CaM) regulated the F-actin-bundling activity of EF-1 alpha [Kurasawa et al. (1996) J. Biochem. 119, 791-798]. In the present study, we investigated the binding between Tetrahymena EF-1 alpha and CaM using a Tetrahymena EF-1 alpha affinity column, and the localization of EF-1 alpha and CaM by indirect immunofluorescence. Only CaM in the Tetrahymena cell extract bound to Tetrahymena EF-1 alpha in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. In interphase Tetrahymena cells, EF-1 alpha and CaM are colocalized in the crescent structure of the oral apparatus and the apical ring, while in dividing cells, they are colocalized in the division furrow. This is the first report describing the coexistence of EF-1 alpha and CaM in the division furrow, suggesting that EF-1 alpha and CaM are involved in the organization of contractile ring microfilaments during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

5.
Kovar DR  Gibbon BC  McCurdy DW  Staiger CJ 《Planta》2001,213(3):390-395
Recently it has been established, through a detailed biochemical analysis, that recombinant Arabidopsis thaliana fimbrin 1 (AtFim1) is a member of the fimbrin/plastin family of actin filament bundling or cross-linking proteins [D.R. Kovar et al. (2000) Plant J 24:625-636]. To determine whether AtFim1 can function as an F-actin-binding protein in the complex environment of the plant cell cytoplasm, we created a fluorescent protein analog and introduced it by microinjection into live Tradescantia virginiana L. stamen hair cells. AtFim1 derivatized with Oregon Green 488 had biochemical properties similar to unlabeled fimbrin, including the Kd value for binding to plant F-actin and the ability to cross-link filaments into higher-order structures. Fluorescent-fimbrin decorated an array of fine actin filaments in the cortical cytoplasm of stamen hair cells, which were shown with time-course studies to be highly dynamic. These data establish AtFim1 as a bona fide member of the fimbrin/plastin family, and represent the first use of a plant actin-binding protein as a powerful cytological tool for tracking the spatial and temporal redistribution of actin filaments in individual cells.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract The fimA gene coding for the major component (fimbrin) of type 1 fimbriae was mapped within the Salmonella typhi fim gene cluster, and its nucleotide sequence determined. The deduced amino acid sequence of S. typhi fimbrin is highly homologous to that of S. typhimurium type 1 fimbrin and showed similarity to that of other enterobacterial type 1 fimbrins. Downstream of fimA , an open reading frame was found, named fimI , able to encode a fimbrin-like protein. The fimI product could represent the counterpart, in type 1 fimbriae, of the PapH protein involved in cell anchoring and length modulation of Escherichia coli Pap pili. This genetic organization was found to be common to other Salmonella serovars, including S. typhimurium and S. choleraesuis .  相似文献   

7.
Localization of Tetrahymena profilin was examined by an immunofluorescence method. In interphase Tetrahymena cells, immunofluorescence for profilin was diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm, while in dividing cells, additional intense fluorescence was observed in the division furrow. From the result of immunofluorescence localization using cytoskeletal cell models, a significant fraction of profilin appeared to become insoluble in association with a cytoskeletal structure just beneath the division furrow during cytokinesis, although remaining profilin existed as a soluble form in the cytoplasm. Double immunofluorescence staining with anti-profilin and anti-actin antibodies revealed that the localization of profilin in the division furrow coincided with that of contractile ring microfilaments in terms of both position and timing. This is the first report describing the coexistence of profilin with actin filaments in the division furrow, implying the possible involvement of profilin in assembly and disassembly of contractile ring microfilaments in the process of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The phosphoenolpyruvate mutase gene from Tetrahymena pyriformis has been cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. To our knowledge, this is the first Tetrahymena gene to be expressed in E. coli, a task made more complicated by the idiosyncratic codon usage by Tetrahymena. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of phosphoenolpyruvate mutase purified from T. pyriformis has been used to generate a precise oligonucleotide probe for the gene, using in vitro amplification from total genomic DNA by the polymerase chain reaction. Use of this precise probe and oligo(T) as primers for in vitro amplification from a T. pyriformis cDNA library has allowed the cloning of the mutase gene. A similar amplification strategy from genomic DNA yielded the genomic sequence, which contains three introns. The sequence of the DNA that encodes 10 amino acids upstream of the N-terminal sequence of the isolated protein was found by oligonucleotide hybridization to a subgenomic library. These 10 N-terminal amino acids are cleanly removed in Tetrahymena in vivo. The full mutase gene sequence codes for a protein of 300 amino acids, and it includes two amber (TAG) codons in the open reading frame. In Tetrahymena, TAG codes for glutamine. When the two amber codons are each changed to a glutamine codon (CAG) that is recognized by E. coli and the gene is placed behind a promoter driven by the T7 RNA polymerase, expression in E. coli is observed. The mutase gene also contains a large number of arginine AGA codons, a codon that is very rarely used by E. coli. Cotransformation with a plasmid carrying the dnaY gene [which encodes tRNA(Arg)(AGA)] results in more than 4-fold higher expression. The mutase then comprises about 25% of the total soluble cell protein in E. coli transformants. The mutase gene bears significant similarity to one other gene in the available data bases, that of carboxyphosphonoenolpyruvate mutase from Streptomyces hygroscopicus, an enzyme that catalyzes a closely related transformation. Due to the large evolutionary distance between Tetrahymena and Streptomyces, this similarity can be interpreted as the first persuasive evidence that the biosynthesis of phosphonates is an ancient metabolic process.  相似文献   

10.
An integral part of cell division is the separation of daughter cells via cytokinesis. There is now good evidence that the completion of cytokinesis requires coordinated membrane trafficking to deliver new membrane to the tip of the furrow and to complete the abscission. Here we have examined membrane traffic in cytokinesis and describe several novel observations. First, we show that Rab11- and FIP3-containing recycling endosomes accumulate near the cleavage furrow and are required for successful completion of cytokinesis. Second, we demonstrate that the Rab11-FIP3 protein complex is intimately involved in the delivery of endosomes to the cleavage furrow. Significantly, although FIP3 recruitment to endosomes is Rab11 dependent, we find that the targeting of FIP3 to the midbody is independent of Rab11. Third, we show that the Rab11-FIP3 complex is required for a late stage of cytokinesis, possibly abscission. Finally, we demonstrate that localization of FIP3 is subject to substantial spatial and temporal regulation. These data provide the first detailed analysis of recycling endosomes in cell division and provide a new model for membrane traffic to the furrow. We propose that the dynamic Rab11-FIP3 interaction controls the delivery, targeting, and fusion of recycling endosomes with furrow during late cytokinesis and abscission.  相似文献   

11.
The diploid germinal nucleus of the ciliated protozoan Tetrahymena thermophila is unusual among eukaryotes in that it encodes a single copy of the gene for rRNA allowing identification of cis-acting mutations in rDNA affecting rRNA structure, function, and processing. The generally conserved nucleolar protein fibrillarin has been characterized from a number of systems and is involved in pre-rRNA processing. We have demonstrated that Tetrahymena has fibrillarin and have analyzed the cDNA and the genomic DNA encoding this protein. The derived amino acid sequence of the N-terminal region of Tetrahymena fibrillarin shows little similarity with the generally highly conserved glycine/arginine-rich N-terminal domain of other eukaryotic fibrillarins. The remainder of the amino acid sequence of the molecule is more conserved. Polyclonal antibodies generated against the full-length Tetrahymena fibrillarin expressed in bacteria recognize a protein of M(r) approximately 32,000 in whole-cell or nucleolar preparations. Immunocytochemistry localizes fibrillarin to nucleoli in the somatic macronuclei of vegetative cells. Transformation experiments demonstrate that fibrillarin is an essential protein in Tetrahymena. The Tetrahymena fibrillarin is expressed but does not complement a NOP1 null mutation when transformed into the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, indicating less functional conservation among fibrillarins than previously suggested.  相似文献   

12.
The cleavage-furrow tip adjacent to the actomyosin contractile ring is believed to be the predominant site for plasma-membrane insertion through exocyst-tethered vesicles during cytokinesis. Here we found that most secretory vesicles are delivered by myosin-V on linear actin cables in fission yeast cytokinesis. Surprisingly, by tracking individual exocytic and endocytic events, we found that vesicles with new membrane are deposited to the cleavage furrow relatively evenly during contractile-ring constriction, but the rim of the cleavage furrow is the main site for endocytosis. Fusion of vesicles with the plasma membrane requires vesicle tethers. Our data suggest that the transport particle protein II (TRAPP-II) complex and Rab11 GTPase Ypt3 help to tether secretory vesicles or tubulovesicular structures along the cleavage furrow while the exocyst tethers vesicles at the rim of the division plane. We conclude that the exocyst and TRAPP-II complex have distinct localizations at the division site, but both are important for membrane expansion and exocytosis during cytokinesis.  相似文献   

13.
Tetrahymena p85 is localized to the presumptive division plane before division furrow formation; its molecular weight in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis differs in wild-type and temperature-sensitive cell-division-arrest mutant cdaA1 cells. At the restrictive temperature, p85 localization and division furrow formation are not observed in cdaA1 cells. In this study, we purified p85 and cloned a wild-type p85 cDNA. The deduced amino acid sequence of p85 was composed mainly of two kinds of repeat sequences. One of these contained regions homologous to a calmodulin-binding site and a part of actin, and the other contained a region homologous to a part of a cdc2 kinase homologue. Moreover, we cloned a cDNA encoding the cdaA1 p85. There was no difference in the predicted amino acid sequences of wild-type and cdaA1 p85, suggesting that the difference in molecular weight between p85 in wild-type and mutant cells is caused by a disorder of posttranslational-modification mechanisms of p85 in the cdaA1 cell.  相似文献   

14.
Integrin trafficking regulated by Rab21 is necessary for cytokinesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Adherent cells undergo remarkable changes in shape during cell division. However, the functional interplay between cell adhesion turnover and the mitotic machinery is poorly understood. The endo/exocytic trafficking of integrins is regulated by the small GTPase Rab21, which associates with several integrin alpha subunits. Here, we show that targeted trafficking of integrins to and from the cleavage furrow is required for successful cytokinesis, and that this is regulated by Rab21. Rab21 activity, integrin-Rab21 association, and integrin endocytosis are all necessary for normal cytokinesis, which becomes impaired when integrin-mediated adhesion at the cleavage furrow fails. We also describe a chromosomal deletion and loss of Rab21 gene expression in human cancer, which leads to the accumulation of multinucleate cells. Importantly, reintroduction of Rab21 rescued this phenotype. In conclusion, Rab21-regulated integrin trafficking is essential for normal cell division, and its defects may contribute to multinucleation and genomic instability, which are hallmarks of cancer.  相似文献   

15.
During cancer development, coordinated changes in cell motility and cell cycle progression are required for the gradual transformation of normal cells into cancer cells. Previous studies have shown that ARF6 is a critical regulator of epithelial cell integrity and motility via its role in membrane movement and actin-based cytoskeletal remodeling. Recently, we have found that ARF6 also plays a role during cell division. It localizes to the cleavage furrow and midbody of cells during mitosis, and its activity is regulated during cytokinesis. Here, we investigate the requirement for ARF6 during mitosis and find that depletion of ARF6 using RNA interference disrupts the completion of cytokinesis. This finding demonstrates that ARF6 is essential during the final stages of cytokinesis. In addition, we have identified Ku70, a DNA-binding protein that is required for DNA damage repair, as a new ARF6-interacting protein and found that it is part of a complex with ARF6, especially during mitosis. These results clarify the importance of ARF6 activity during cytokinesis and begin to reveal other molecules that may contribute to the function of ARF6.  相似文献   

16.
Cytokinesis requires a complex network of equatorial and global proteins to regulate cell shape changes. Here, using interaction genetics, we report the first characterization of a novel protein, enlazin. Enlazin is a natural fusion of two canonical classes of actin-associated proteins, the ezrin-radixin-moesin family and fimbrin, and it is localized to actin-rich structures. A fragment of enlazin, enl-tr, was isolated as a genetic suppressor of the cytokinesis defect of cortexillin-I mutants. Expression of enl-tr disrupts expression of endogenous enlazin, indicating that enl-tr functions as a dominant-negative lesion. Enlazin is distributed globally during cytokinesis and is required for cortical tension and cell adhesion. Consistent with a role in cell mechanics, inhibition of enlazin in a cortexillin-I background restores cytokinesis furrowing dynamics and suppresses the growth-in-suspension defect. However, as expected for a role in cell adhesion, inhibiting enlazin in a myosin-II background induces a synthetic cytokinesis phenotype, frequently arresting furrow ingression at the dumbbell shape and/or causing recession of the furrow. Thus, enlazin has roles in cell mechanics and adhesion, and these roles seem to be differentially significant for cytokinesis, depending on the genetic background.  相似文献   

17.
All air-living organisms produce superoxide dismutase (SOD) and several antioxidant enzymes that limit oxidative stress by detoxifying reactive oxygen species. SOD1 gene has been investigated in Egyptian native cattle and buffalos at the level of genomic DNA and cDNA that were extracted from leucocytes. An unexpected band at approximately 370 bp was obtained in cattle genomic DNA and cDNA as well as in buffalo cDNA. SOD1 amplified sequence of native cattle genomic DNA and cDNA showed a 93% alignment. Native cattle genomic DNA SOD1 amplicon shares sequence homology with mRNAs of Bos taurus “similar to superoxide dismutase” (SOD1) sequence of the GeneBank database. It also shares sequence homology with “similar to superoxide dismutase” on B. taurus chromosome BTA13. The results indicate that the genomic DNA of Egyptian native cattle contains SOD1 processed pseudo gene. SOD1 primers amplified three fragments in buffalo genomic DNA which indicates that buffalo genome has different copies of SOD1 due to alternative splicing. It failed to produce the 370 bp fragments found in cattle DNA. The protein analysis revealed no differences between Egyptian native cattle and B. taurus SOD1 mRNA. However, one amino acid, aspartic acid (Asp), in Egyptian native cattle and B. taurus SOD1, is substituted with asparagine (Asn) (D26N) in buffaloes. This amino acid substitution may be due to non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (nsSNPs). The nsSNPs detected in buffaloes may affect the function of the encoded protein. This study is the first investigation reporting that the resistance of the buffalo to diseases and parasites that afflict cattle may not be acquired but may have a genetic basis.  相似文献   

18.
Cell division after mitosis is mediated by ingression of an actomyosin-based contractile ring. The active, GTP-bound form of the small GTPase RhoA is a key regulator of contractile-ring formation. RhoA concentrates at the equatorial cell cortex at the site of the nascent cleavage furrow. During cytokinesis, RhoA is activated by its RhoGEF, ECT2. Once activated, RhoA promotes nucleation, elongation, and sliding of actin filaments through the coordinated activation of both formin proteins and myosin II motors (reviewed in [1, 2]). Anillin is a 124 kDa protein that is highly concentrated in the cleavage furrow in numerous animal cells in a pattern that resembles that of RhoA [3-7]. Although anillin contains conserved N-terminal actin and myosin binding domains and a PH domain at the C terminus, its mechanism of action during cytokinesis remains unclear. Here, we show that human anillin contains a conserved C-terminal domain that is essential for its function and localization. This domain shares homology with the RhoA binding protein Rhotekin and directly interacts with RhoA. Further, anillin is required to maintain active myosin in the equatorial plane during cytokinesis, suggesting it functions as a scaffold protein to link RhoA with the ring components actin and myosin. Although furrows can form and initiate ingression in the absence of anillin, furrows cannot form in anillin-depleted cells in which the central spindle is also disrupted, revealing that anillin can also act at an early stage of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

19.
A protein purified from cytoskeletal fractions of Dictyostelium discoideum proved to be a member of the fimbrin/plastin family of actin-bundling proteins. Like other family members, this Ca(2+)-inhibited 67-kDa protein contains two EF hands followed by two actin-binding sites of the alpha-actinin/beta-spectrin type. Dd plastin interacted selectively with actin isoforms: it bound to D. discoideum actin and to beta/gamma-actin from bovine spleen but not to alpha-actin from rabbit skeletal muscle. Immunofluorescence labeling of growth phase cells showed accumulation of Dd plastin in cortical structures associated with cell surface extensions. In the elongated, streaming cells of the early aggregation stage, Dd plastin was enriched in the front regions. To examine how the bundled actin filaments behave in myosin II-driven motility, complexes of F-actin and Dd plastin were bound to immobilized heavy meromyosin, and motility was started by photoactivating caged ATP. Actin filaments were immediately propelled out of bundles or even larger aggregates and moved on the myosin as separate filaments. This result shows that myosin can disperse an actin network when it acts as a motor and sheds light on the dynamics of protein-protein interactions in the cortex of a motile cell where myosin II and Dd plastin are simultaneously present.  相似文献   

20.
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