Exploring the evolutionary history of centrosomes |
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Authors: | Juliette Azimzadeh |
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Affiliation: | CNRS/Université Paris-Diderot, Institut Jacques Monod, 15 rue Hélène Brion, 75209 Paris cedex 13, France |
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Abstract: | The centrosome is the main organizer of the microtubule cytoskeleton in animals, higher fungi and several other eukaryotic lineages. Centrosomes are usually located at the centre of cell in tight association with the nuclear envelope and duplicate at each cell cycle. Despite a great structural diversity between the different types of centrosomes, they are functionally equivalent and share at least some of their molecular components. In this paper, we explore the evolutionary origin of the different centrosomes, in an attempt to understand whether they are derived from an ancestral centrosome or evolved independently from the motile apparatus of distinct flagellated ancestors. We then discuss the evolution of centrosome structure and function within the animal lineage. |
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Keywords: | centrosome evolution cytoskeleton microtubule eukaryote |
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