Title of article :
Tropomyosin and caldesmon regulate cytokinesis speed and membrane stability during cell division
Author/Authors :
Eppinga، نويسنده , , Robbin D. and Li، نويسنده , , Yan and Lin، نويسنده , , Jenny L.-C. and Lin، نويسنده , , Jim J.-C.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The contractile ring and the cell cortex generate force to divide the cell while maintaining symmetrical shape. This requires temporal and spatial regulation of the actin cytoskeleton at these areas. We force-expressed misregulated versions of actin-binding proteins, tropomyosin and caldesmon, into cells and analyzed their effects on cell division. Cells expressing proteins that increase actomyosin ATPase, such as human tropomyosin chimera (hTM5/3), significantly speed up division, whereas cells expressing proteins that inhibit actomyosin, such as caldesmon mutants defective in Ca2+/calmodulin binding (CaD39-AB) and in cdk1 phosphorylation sites (CaD39-6F), divide slowly. hTM5 and hTM5/3-expressing cells lift one daughter cell off the substrate and twist. Furthermore, CaD39-AB- and CaD39-6F-expressing cells are sensitive to hypotonic swelling and show severe blebbing during division, whereas hTM5/3-expressing cells are resistant to hypotonic swelling and produce membrane bulges. These results support a model where Ca2+/calmodulin and cdk1 dynamically control caldesmon inhibition of tropomyosin-activated actomyosin to regulate division speed and to suppress membrane blebs.
Keywords :
Cytokinesis , Membrane bleb , Contractile ring , Ca2+/calmodulin , Cell cortex , cdk1/cdc2 , Membrane bulge , p21-activated kinase
Journal title :
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Journal title :
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics