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Kinetic and structural roles for the surface in guiding SAS-6 self-assembly to direct centriole architecture

Authors :
Frieda A. Sorgenfrei
Svenja Svenja de Buhr
Niccolò Banterle
Frauke Gräter
Ulrich S. Schwarz
Georg E. Fantner
Tania Hübscher
Georgios N. Hatzopoulos
Adrian P. Nievergelt
Pierre Gönczy
Santiago H. Andany
Charlène Brillard
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature communications, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Discovering mechanisms governing organelle assembly is a fundamental pursuit in biology. The centriole is an evolutionarily conserved organelle with a signature 9-fold symmetrical chiral arrangement of microtubules imparted onto the cilium it templates. The first structure in nascent centrioles is a cartwheel, which comprises stacked 9-fold symmetrical SAS-6 ring polymers emerging orthogonal to a surface surrounding each resident centriole. The mechanisms through which SAS-6 polymerization ensures centriole organelle architecture remain elusive. We deploy photothermally-actuated off-resonance tapping high-speed atomic force microscopy to decipher surface SAS-6 self-assembly mechanisms. We show that the surface shifts the reaction equilibrium by ~104 compared to solution. Moreover, coarse-grained molecular dynamics and atomic force microscopy reveal that the surface converts the inherent helical propensity of SAS-6 polymers into 9-fold rings with residual asymmetry, which may guide ring stacking and impart chiral features to centrioles and cilia. Overall, our work reveals fundamental design principles governing centriole assembly.<br />The centriole exhibits an evolutionarily conserved 9-fold radial symmetry that stems from a cartwheel containing vertically stacked ring polymers that harbor 9 homodimers of the protein SAS-6. Here the authors show how dual properties inherent to surface-guided SAS-6 self-assembly possess spatial information that dictates correct scaffolding of centriole architecture.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c2ae66315c30fd7309e5a874c952ed5