Mutual antagonism between Hippo signaling and cyclin E drives intracellular pattern formation

Author:

Jiang Yu-Yang1ORCID,Maier Wolfgang2,Chukka Uzoamaka N.1,Choromanski Michael1,Lee Chinkyu1,Joachimiak Ewa3ORCID,Wloga Dorota3ORCID,Yeung Wayland45,Kannan Natarajan45,Frankel Joseph6ORCID,Gaertig Jacek1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cellular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA

2. Bioinformatics, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany

3. Laboratory of Cytoskeleton and Cilia Biology, Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology of Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland

4. Institute of Bioinformatics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA

5. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA

6. Department of Biology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA

Abstract

Not much is known about how organelles organize into patterns. In ciliates, the cortical pattern is propagated during “tandem duplication,” a cell division that remodels the parental cell into two daughter cells. A key step is the formation of the division boundary along the cell’s equator. In Tetrahymena thermophila, the cdaA alleles prevent the formation of the division boundary. We find that the CDAA gene encodes a cyclin E that accumulates in the posterior cell half, concurrently with accumulation of CdaI, a Hippo/Mst kinase, in the anterior cell half. The division boundary forms between the margins of expression of CdaI and CdaA, which exclude each other from their own cortical domains. The activities of CdaA and CdaI must be balanced to initiate the division boundary and to position it along the cell’s equator. CdaA and CdaI cooperate to position organelles near the new cell ends. Our data point to an intracellular positioning mechanism involving antagonistic Hippo signaling and cyclin E.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Centre, Poland

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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