Abstract
Abstract/SummaryCentrioles are structurally conserved organelles, composing both centrosomes and cilia. In animal cycling cells, centrioles often form through a highly characterized process termed canonical duplication. However, a large diversity of eukaryotes form centrioles de novo through uncharacterized pathways. This unexplored diversity is key to understanding centriole assembly mechanisms and how they evolved to assist specific cellular functions. Here, combining electron microscopy and tomography, we show that during spermatogenesis of the moss Physcomitrium patens, centrioles are born as a co-axially oriented centriole pair united by a cartwheel. We observe that microtubules emanate from those bicentrioles, which localize to the spindle poles during cell division. Thereafter, each bicentriole breaks apart, and the two resulting sister centrioles mature asymmetrically, elongating specific microtubule triplets and a naked cartwheel. Subsequently, two cilia are assembled which are capable of beating asynchronously. We further show that conserved cartwheel and centriole wall components, SAS6, BLD10 and POC1 are expressed during spermatogenesis and are required for this de novo biogenesis pathway. Our work supports a scenario where centriole biogenesis is more diverse than previously thought and that conserved molecular modules underlie diversification of this essential pathway.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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