3,440 research outputs found

    Nuclear-localized subtype of end-binding 1 protein regulates spindle organization in Arabidopsis

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    End-binding 1 (EB1) proteins are evolutionarily conserved plus-end-tracking proteins that localize to growing microtubule plus ends where they regulate microtubule dynamics and interactions with intracellular targets. Animal EB1 proteins have acidic C-terminal tails that might induce an autoinhibitory conformation. Although EB1 proteins with the same structural features occur in plants (EB1a and EB1b in Arabidopsis thaliana), a variant form (EB1c) is present that lacks the characteristic tail. We show that in Arabidopsis the tail region of EB1b, but not of EB1c, inhibits microtubule assembly in vitro. EB1a and EB1b form heterodimers with each other, but not with EB1c. Furthermore, the EB1 genes are expressed in various cell types of Arabidopsis, but the expression of EB1c is particularly strong in the meristematic cells where it is targeted to the nucleus by a nuclear localization signal in the C-terminal tail. Reduced expression of EB1c compromised the alignment of spindle and phragmoplast microtubules and caused frequent lagging of separating chromosomes at anaphase. Roots of the eb1c mutant were hypersensitive to a microtubule-disrupting drug and complete rescue of the mutant phenotype required the tail region of EB1c. These results suggest that a plant-specific EB1 subtype has evolved to function preferentially on the spindle microtubules by accumulating in the prophase nucleus

    A PAR-1–dependent orientation gradient of dynamic microtubules directs posterior cargo transport in the Drosophila oocyte

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    A PAR-1–mediated bias in microtubule organization in the Drosophila oocyte underlies posterior-directed mRNA transport

    Model based dynamics analysis in live cell microtubule images

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    Background: The dynamic growing and shortening behaviors of microtubules are central to the fundamental roles played by microtubules in essentially all eukaryotic cells. Traditionally, microtubule behavior is quantified by manually tracking individual microtubules in time-lapse images under various experimental conditions. Manual analysis is laborious, approximate, and often offers limited analytical capability in extracting potentially valuable information from the data. Results: In this work, we present computer vision and machine-learning based methods for extracting novel dynamics information from time-lapse images. Using actual microtubule data, we estimate statistical models of microtubule behavior that are highly effective in identifying common and distinct characteristics of microtubule dynamic behavior. Conclusion: Computational methods provide powerful analytical capabilities in addition to traditional analysis methods for studying microtubule dynamic behavior. Novel capabilities, such as building and querying microtubule image databases, are introduced to quantify and analyze microtubule dynamic behavior

    Automated Screening of Microtubule Growth Dynamics Identifies MARK2 as a Regulator of Leading Edge Microtubules Downstream of Rac1 in Migrating Cells

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    Polarized microtubule (MT) growth in the leading edge is critical to directed cell migration, and is mediated by Rac1 GTPase. To find downstream targets of Rac1 that affect MT assembly dynamics, we performed an RNAi screen of 23 MT binding and regulatory factors and identified RNAi treatments that suppressed changes in MT dynamics induced by constitutively activated Rac1. By analyzing fluorescent EB3 dynamics with automated tracking, we found that RNAi treatments targeting p150glued, APC2, spastin, EB1, Op18, or MARK2 blocked Rac1-mediated MT growth in lamellipodia. MARK2 was the only protein whose RNAi targeting additionally suppressed Rac1 effects on MT orientation in lamellipodia, and thus became the focus of further study. We show that GFP-MARK2 rescued effects of MARK2 depletion on MT growth lifetime and orientation, and GFP-MARK2 localized in lamellipodia in a Rac1-activity-dependent manner. In a wound-edge motility assay, MARK2-depleted cells failed to polarize their centrosomes or exhibit oriented MT growth in the leading edge, and displayed defects in directional cell migration. Thus, automated image analysis of MT assembly dynamics identified MARK2 as a target regulated downstream of Rac1 that promotes oriented MT growth in the leading edge to mediate directed cell migration

    Rice microtubule‐associated protein IQ67‐DOMAIN14 regulates rice grain shape by modulating microtubule cytoskeleton dynamics

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    Cortical microtubule (MT) arrays play a critical role in plant cell shape determination by defining the direction of cell expansion. As plants continuously adapt to ever‐changing environmental conditions, multiple environmental and developmental inputs need to be translated into changes of the MT cytoskeleton. Here, we identify and functionally characterize an auxin‐inducible and MT‐localized protein OsIQ67‐DOMAIN14 (OsIQD14), which is highly expressed in rice seed hull cells. We show that while deficiency of OsIQD14 results in short and wide seeds and increases overall yield, overexpression leads to narrow and long seeds, caused by changed MT alignment. We further show that OsIQD14‐mediated MT reordering is regulated by specifically affecting MT dynamics, and ectopic expression of OsIQD14 in Arabidopsis could change the cell shape both in pavement cells and hypocotyl cells. Additionally, OsIQD14 activity is tightly controlled by calmodulin proteins, providing an alternative way to modify the OsIQD14 activity. Our results indicate that OsIQD14 acts as a key factor in regulating MT rearrangements in rice hull cells and hence the grain shape, and allows effective local cell shape manipulation to improve the rice yield trait

    The identification of the Tao-1 kinase as a key regulator of microtubule dynamics

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    In a multicellular animal, the different functions of cells are dependent on their diversity of shapes. Protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation play an important role in altering the cell shape in response to internal and external signals. In this study I focused on all kinases to explore the gene functions and mechanisms underlying the regulation of cell morphology. Using genomic information I have constructed a Drosophila kinase RNAi library, which was then used to screen six different cell lines from two different tissues of origin for novel genes involved in the generation of cell form. In doing so, I identified a group of common regulators of cell behaviour and morphology together with a set of cell-type specific kinases. Importantly, this analysis also revealed that, when considering the kinome, gene expression signatures are a poor measure of cell type specific differences in gene function, measured by comparing with the microarray data available in our lab. Most significantly, these screens identified a novel role for Mnb/DYRK1A, a kinase associated with Down’s Syndrome, in the regulation of actin-based protrusions in cell lines derived from neuronal lineages. Furthermore, I identified a single STE20 kinase Drosophila Tao-1 in the core set which was required for the normal morphology of all cell lines examined. The RNAi-mediated depletion of Tao-1 or expression of the kinase-dead protein leads to the stabilisation of microtubules and to the formation of long microtubule-based protrusions, whereas the overexpression of Tao-1 destabilizes microtubules. I also showed in this study that Tao-1 acts independently of Par-1 and Tau in this process. Instead, Tao-1 appears to function together with EB1 in the regulation of microtubule plus end instability at the cell cortex. Two microtubule motor proteins, Khc and Khc-73, interact with Tao-1 in a yeast two hybrid screen, which hints at a possible role for the transport of Tao-1 along filaments to microtubule plus ends and the cell cortex. Although evidence for a direct role for Tao-1 in the phosphorylation and/or regulation of EB1 has yet to be established, this is to my knowledge first time a kinase has been found acting at the cell cortex to regulate microtubule plus end stability

    Microtubules gate tau condensation to spatially regulate microtubule functions.

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    Tau is an abundant microtubule-associated protein in neurons. Tau aggregation into insoluble fibrils is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia1, yet the physiological state of tau molecules within cells remains unclear. Using single-molecule imaging, we directly observe that the microtubule lattice regulates reversible tau self-association, leading to localized, dynamic condensation of tau molecules on the microtubule surface. Tau condensates form selectively permissible barriers, spatially regulating the activity of microtubule-severing enzymes and the movement of molecular motors through their boundaries. We propose that reversible self-association of tau molecules, gated by the microtubule lattice, is an important mechanism of the biological functions of tau, and that oligomerization of tau is a common property shared between the physiological and disease-associated forms of the molecule
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