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© The Rockefeller University Press,
0021-9525/1998//0 $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 143, Number 7,
, 1998 0-2
In Brief |
In Brief
| Movement by Cable or Capture |
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Most perturbations to the actin system depolarize both patches and cables, but Pruyne et al. find that the combination of a temperature-sensitive tropomyosin 1 mutation and a tropomyosin 2 deletion can be used to selectively rid the cell of cables. Tropomyosin is found on, and stabilizes, actin cables but is not present in actin patches.
Actin cables disappear just one minute after shifting the double mutant to a restrictive temperature; another minute later two other molecules are no longer concentrated at the bud tip. These proteins—Sec4, a secretory vesicle GTPase, and Myo2p, an unconventional myosin V implicated in targeted secretion—become diffuse several minutes before actin patches begin to delocalize.
When the mutant is shifted back to the permissive temperature, tropomyosin-containing cables are reformed, and Sec4p and Myo2p localization are reestablished within one to two minutes. Repolarization of actin patches takes 15–20 min.
The tropomyosin double mutant should help identify the yeast cell polarity marker. Of the proteins that are localized to the bud tip, only those that remain localized in the tropomyosin mutant, and that are necessary for regeneration of polarized cables, will remain as the leading candidates.
This work and previous studies with Myo2p establish actin cable–based transport as the key event in yeast polarized secretion. Transport of mammalian melanosomes was also thought to be an actin-dependent process. But in mouse melanocytes, Wu et al. (page ) find that these pigmented organelles also undergo rapid, bidirectional, microtubule-dependent movements between the cell center and the periphery. A myosin V isoform encoded by the dilute locus is necessary for peripheral accumulation of melanosomes, but it functions primarily by capturing these organelles in the cell periphery.
The striking difference between these two papers may reflect the different dimensions of the two cell types. Smaller yeast cells may preferentially use actin-based transport, whereas larger vertebrate cells use both short-range actin-based transport and longer-range microtubule-based transport.
| Gathering Together Unfolded Proteins |
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Johnston et al. use a poorly folding mutant of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) as their model protein. Overproduction of the protein, or inhibition of the proteolytic activities of the proteasome, leads to formation of the aggresome. Formation of these stable structures requires microtubules; in the absence of microtubules unfolded protein is found throughout the cytoplasm in roughly spherical, membrane-free particles 60– 80 nm in diameter. Aggresomes appear to be an aggregate of these particles wrapped in bundles of filamentous material that includes the intermediate filament vimentin.
Vimentin forms a similar cage around the spindle during mitosis, and its participation in aggresome formation may be a byproduct of this mitotic role. The tangled and ubiquitinated protein in aggresomes is probably a potent proteasome inhibitor, as substrates of the proteasome must be unfolded before they are destroyed. Inhibition of the proteasome may disrupt the cell cycle and lead to the vimentin phosphorylation that, in mitosis, causes it to coalesce around the spindle.
Gathering together unfolded proteins may limit their interference with membranes and partially folded protein intermediates. But aggresomes form around the centrosome, so they may disrupt microtubule-dependent trafficking in neurons, or cell division in other cells. Johnston et al. suggest that aggresomes are a general response to unfolded proteins, as they detect similar structures after expressing the Alzheimer's disease protein presenilin-1. The relation of aggresomes to the protein aggregates found in many neurodegenerative disorders remains to be established.
| Not All Sarcoglycans Are Equal |
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Chan et al. (page ) take a first step in analyzing sarcoglycans by dividing the subcomplex into a core of β- and
-sarcoglycan, with
- and then
-sarcoglycan more loosely associated. Only
-sarcoglycan cross-links to the
/β-dystrophin unit. The definition of a core complex explains why human patients with β- or
-sarcoglycan mutations show a complete loss or drastic reduction in all sarcoglycan proteins, whereas patients with
- or
-sarcoglycan mutations often retain some sarcoglycan expression.
Intramolecular disulfide bonds are present in β-,
-, and
-sarcoglycan, and the protein sequences suggest that the disulfides may form a structure resembling the ligand-binding pocket of growth factor receptors. Sarcoglycans might be involved in mechanochemical signaling, but candidate ligands have not been defined.
| Nuclear Pore Complexes and Spindle Pole Bodies Share a Component |
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Mutants in ndc1 fail to insert the nascent SPB into the nuclear envelope, but Chial et al. do not find a similar defect in NPC insertion. It is possible that the SPB insertion defect is secondary to a specific defect in nuclear transport, but senior author Mark Winey favors an alternative. "Our favorite model is that the two organelles share at some level the same mechanism for membrane insertion," he says. The extreme version of the model, he says, is that the two organelles could have a shared ancestry.
In support of the insertion model, Ndc1p localizes to the periphery of NPCs and the edges of the SPB central plaques. The localization data suggests that Ndc1p has a direct role in SPB insertion (contrary to previous assumptions), and may provide the first real handle on this process.
| Early Functions for Desmosomes |
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Desmoplakin was thought to operate solely as a linker to intermediate filaments, and indeed there are few if any intermediate filaments associated with the desmosomes in the knockout. But these desmosomes are also 10-fold fewer in number and 2-fold smaller than in wild-type embryos. Thus, it appears that desmoplakin is not only important in attaching intermediate filaments to desmosomes, but also necessary for desmosome assembly or stabilization. The loss of attachment to intermediate filaments does not by itself lead to a loss of desmosome integrity, as intact desmosomes are found in knockout mouse cells that lack keratin networks.
The desmoplakin knockout mice successfully progress past the implantation stage, suggesting that E-cadherin linkages can withstand the forces inherent in forming a blastocoel cavity. By embryonic day 6, ectoderm proliferation and elongation of the central egg cylinder begin to fail. At this stage desmosomes are normally present only in the extraembryonic tissues, such as the endoderm that encases the ectoderm. This mutant endoderm must be failing either to protect or to send a signal to the ectoderm. This failure, and the breaking apart of the surrounding endoderm in response to the stresses of ectodermal proliferation and remodeling, lead to embryonic lethality within the next day.
| A Sex-specific Homeodomain Protein in Algae |
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By William A. Wells, 1095 Market St. #516, San Francisco, CA 94103. E-mail: wells{at}biotext.com
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