Biology Open (Aug 2015)

Evolutionarily conserved sites in yeast tropomyosin function in cell polarity, transport and contractile ring formation

  • Susanne Cranz-Mileva,
  • Brittany MacTaggart,
  • Jacquelyn Russell,
  • Sarah E. Hitchcock-DeGregori

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1242/bio.012609
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 8
pp. 1040 – 1051

Abstract

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Tropomyosin is a coiled-coil protein that binds and regulates actin filaments. The tropomyosin gene in Schizosaccharomyces pombe, cdc8, is required for formation of actin cables, contractile rings, and polar localization of actin patches. The roles of conserved residues were investigated in gene replacement mutants. The work validates an evolution-based approach to identify tropomyosin functions in living cells and sites of potential interactions with other proteins. A cdc8 mutant with near-normal actin affinity affects patch polarization and vacuole fusion, possibly by affecting Myo52p, a class V myosin, function. The presence of labile residual cell attachments suggests a delay in completion of cell division and redistribution of cell patches following cytokinesis. Another mutant with a mild phenotype is synthetic negative with GFP-fimbrin, inferring involvement of the mutated tropomyosin sites in interaction between the two proteins. Proteins that assemble in the contractile ring region before actin do so in a mutant cdc8 strain that cannot assemble condensed actin rings, yet some cells can divide. Of general significance, LifeAct-GFP negatively affects the actin cytoskeleton, indicating caution in its use as a biomarker for actin filaments.

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