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Plastin increases cortical connectivity to facilitate robust polarization and timely cytokinesis

Authors :
Ding, Wei Yung
Ong, Hui Ting
Hara, Yusuke
Wongsantichon, Jantana
Toyama, Yusuke
Robinson, Robert C
Nédélec, François
Zaidel-Bar, Ronen
Hara, Yusuke [0000-0002-2005-7704]
Wongsantichon, Jantana [0000-0002-4134-2248]
Toyama, Yusuke [0000-0003-3230-1062]
Nédélec, François [0000-0002-8141-5288]
Zaidel-Bar, Ronen [0000-0002-1374-5007]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2017.

Abstract

The cell cortex is essential to maintain animal cell shape, and contractile forces generated within it by nonmuscle myosin II (NMY-2) drive cellular morphogenetic processes such as cytokinesis. The role of actin cross-linking proteins in cortical dynamics is still incompletely understood. Here, we show that the evolutionarily conserved actin bundling/cross-linking protein plastin is instrumental for the generation of potent cortical actomyosin contractility in the Caenorhabditis elegans zygote. PLST-1 was enriched in contractile structures and was required for effective coalescence of NMY-2 filaments into large contractile foci and for long-range coordinated contractility in the cortex. In the absence of PLST-1, polarization was compromised, cytokinesis was delayed or failed, and 50% of embryos died during development. Moreover, mathematical modeling showed that an optimal amount of bundling agents enhanced the ability of a network to contract. We propose that by increasing the connectivity of the F-actin meshwork, plastin enables the cortex to generate stronger and more coordinated forces to accomplish cellular morphogenesis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c81e099d9cc4d4aa79cd8af2761eed7