24 research outputs found
Recruitment of the mitotic exit network to yeast centrosomes couples septin displacement to actomyosin constriction
The Mitotic Exit Network (MEN) promotes mitotic exit and cytokinesis but if and how MEN independently controls these two processes is unclear. Here, the authors report that MEN displaces septins from the cell division site to promote actomyosin ring constriction, independently of MEN control of mitotic exit
Mapping the orientation of nuclear pore proteins in living cells with polarized fluorescence microscopy
The nuclear pore complex (NPC) perforates the nuclear envelope to facilitate selective transport between nucleus and cytoplasm. The NPC is composed of multiple copies of ~30 different proteins, termed nucleoporins, whose arrangement within the NPC is a major unsolved puzzle in structural biology. Various alternative models for NPC architecture have been proposed but not tested experimentally in intact NPCs. We present a method using polarized fluorescence microscopy to investigate nucleoporin orientation in live yeast and mammalian cells. Our results support an arrangement of both yeast Nic96 and human Nup133–Nup107 with their long axes approximately parallel to the nuclear envelope plane. This method can complement X-ray crystallography and electron microscopy to generate a high-resolution map of the entire NPC, and could monitor nucleoporin rearrangements during nucleocytoplasmic transport and NPC assembly. This strategy can also be adapted for other macromolecular machines
Characterization of Septin Ultrastructure in Budding Yeast Using Electron Tomography.
Septins are essential for the completion of cytokinesis. In budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, septins are located at the bud neck during mitosis and are closely connected to the inner plasma membrane. In vitro, yeast septins have been shown to self-assemble into a variety of filamentous structures, including rods, paired filaments, bundles, and rings (Bertin et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 105(24):8274-8279, 2008; Garcia et al. J Cell Biol, 195(6):993-1004, 2011; Bertin et al. J Mol Biol, 404(4):711-731, 2010). Using electron tomography of freeze-substituted sections and cryo-electron tomography of frozen sections, we determined the three-dimensional organization of the septin cytoskeleton in dividing budding yeast with molecular resolution (Bertin et al. Mol Biol Cell, 23(3):423-432, 2012; Bertin and Nogales. Commun Integr Biol 5(5):503-505, 2012). Here, we describe the detailed procedures used for our characterization of the septin cellular ultrastructure
Three-dimensional ultrastructure of the septin filament network in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Septins are essential for membrane compartmentalization and remodeling. Electron tomography of yeast bud necks shows filaments perpendicular and parallel to the mother-bud axis that resemble in vitro septin arrays. Filaments are still present, although disordered, in mutants lacking a single septin, underscoring the importance of septin assembly