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Cytokinetic contractile ring structural progression in an early embryo: positioning of scaffolding proteins, recruitment of α-actinin, and effects of myosin II inhibition

Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, ISSN: 2296-634X, Vol: 12, Page: 1483345
2024
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  • Captures
    1
  • Mentions
    1
    • News Mentions
      1
      • News
        1
  • Social Media
    76
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      76
      • Facebook
        76

Most Recent News

New Muscle Proteins Data Have Been Reported by Researchers at Dickinson College (Cytokinetic contractile ring structural progression in an early embryo: positioning of scaffolding proteins, recruitment of a-actinin, and effects of myosin II ...)

2024 OCT 14 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Health & Medicine Daily -- Data detailed on muscle proteins have been presented.

Article Description

Our knowledge of the assembly and dynamics of the cytokinetic contractile ring (CR) in animal cells remains incomplete. We have previously used super-resolution light microscopy and platinum replica electron microscopy to elucidate the ultrastructural organization of the CR in first division sea urchin embryos. To date, our studies indicate that the CR initiates as an equatorial band of clusters containing myosin II, actin, septin and anillin, which then congress over time into patches which coalesce into a linear array characteristic of mature CRs. In the present study, we applied super-resolution interferometric photoactivated localization microscopy to confirm the existence of septin filament-like structures in the developing CR, demonstrate the close associations between septin2, anillin, and myosin II in the CR, as well as to show that septin2 appears consistently submembranous, whereas anillin is more widely distributed in the early CR. We also provide evidence that the major actin cross-linking protein α-actinin only associates with the linearized, late-stage CR and not with the early CR clusters, providing further support to the idea that α-actinin associates with actomyosin structures under tension and can serve as a counterbalance. In addition, we show that inhibition of actomyosin contraction does not stop the assembly of the early CR clusters but does arrest the progression of these structures to the aligned arrays required for functional cytokinesis. Taken together our results reinforce and extend our model for a cluster to patch to linear structural progression of the CR in sea urchin embryos and highlight the evolutionary relationships with cytokinesis in fission yeast.

Bibliographic Details

Henson, John H; Reyes, Gabriela; Lo, Nina T; Herrera, Karina; McKim, Quenelle W; Herzon, Hannah Y; Galvez-Ceron, Maritriny; Hershey, Alexandra E; Kim, Rachael S; Shuster, Charles B

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Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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