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research
Micron-scale plasma membrane curvature is recognized by the septin cytoskeleton
Authors
Amy S. Gladfelter
Andrew A. Bridges
+42 more
Bertin
Booth
Bowen
Bridges
Bridges
Chao
DeMay
Dietrich
Dinno
Dolat
Elliott
Fares
Fox
Gilden
Gilden
Gladfelter
Helfer
Hu
Kinoshita
Kroon
Kroon
Lisovich
Longtine
Mavrakis
Maximilian S. Jentzsch
Mostowy
Mostowy
Patricia Occhipinti
Patrick W. Oakes
Ramamurthi
Sirajuddin
Tada
Tanaka-Takiguchi
Tooley
Warnes
Warnes
Wickham
Wickham
Wickham
Winston
Xie
Zimmerberg
Publication date
4 April 2016
Publisher
'Rockefeller University Press'
Doi
Cite
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
© The Author(s), 2016. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Journal of Cell Biology 213 (2016): 23-32, doi: 10.1083/jcb.201512029.Cells change shape in response to diverse environmental and developmental conditions, creating topologies with micron-scale features. Although individual proteins can sense nanometer-scale membrane curvature, it is unclear if a cell could also use nanometer-scale components to sense micron-scale contours, such as the cytokinetic furrow and base of neuronal branches. Septins are filament-forming proteins that serve as signaling platforms and are frequently associated with areas of the plasma membrane where there is micron-scale curvature, including the cytokinetic furrow and the base of cell protrusions. We report here that fungal and human septins are able to distinguish between different degrees of micron-scale curvature in cells. By preparing supported lipid bilayers on beads of different curvature, we reconstitute and measure the intrinsic septin curvature preference. We conclude that micron-scale curvature recognition is a fundamental property of the septin cytoskeleton that provides the cell with a mechanism to know its local shape.This work was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation (MCB-507511 to A.S. Gladfelter) and the National Institutes of Health (NIGMS-T32GM008704 to A.A. Bridges)
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