[
J Cell Biol,
2016]
Cytokinesis in animal cells requires the constriction of an actomyosin contractile ring, whose architecture and mechanism remain poorly understood. We use laser microsurgery to explore the biophysical properties of constricting rings in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos. Laser cutting causes rings to snap open. However, instead of disintegrating, ring topology recovers and constriction proceeds. In response to severing, a finite gap forms and is repaired by recruitment of new material in an actin polymerization-dependent manner. An open ring is able to constrict, and rings repair from successive cuts. After gap repair, an increase in constriction velocity allows cytokinesis to complete at the same time as controls. Our analysis demonstrates that tension in the ring increases while net cortical tension at the site of ingression decreases throughout constriction and suggests that cytokinesis is accomplished by contractile modules that assemble and contract autonomously, enabling local repair of the actomyosin network. Consequently, cytokinesis is a highly robust process impervious to discontinuities in contractile ring structure.
[
International Worm Meeting,
2017]
Extracellular vesicles are emerging as an important aspect of intercellular communication by delivering a parcel of proteins, lipids even nucleic acids to specific target cells over short or long distances (Maas 2017). A subset of C. elegans ciliated neurons release EVs to the environment and elicit changes in male behaviors in a cargo-dependent manner (Wang 2014, Silva 2017). Our studies raise many questions regarding these social communicating EV devices. Why is the cilium the donor site? What mechanisms control ciliary EV biogenesis? How are bioactive functions encoded within EVs? EV detection is a challenge and obstacle because of their small size (100nm). However, we possess the first and only system to visualize and monitor GFP-tagged EVs in living animals in real time. We are using several approaches to define the properties of an EV-releasing neuron (EVN) and to decipher the biology of ciliary-released EVs. To identify mechanisms regulating biogenesis, release, and function of ciliary EVs we took an unbiased transcriptome approach by isolating EVNs from adult worms and performing RNA-seq. We identified 335 significantly upregulated genes, of which 61 were validated by GFP reporters as expressed in EVNs (Wang 2015). By characterizing components of this EVN parts list, we discovered new components and pathways controlling EV biogenesis, EV shedding and retention in the cephalic lumen, and EV environmental release. We also identified cell-specific regulators of EVN ciliogenesis and are currently exploring mechanisms regulating EV cargo sorting. Our genetically tractable model can make inroads where other systems have not, and advance frontiers of EV knowledge where little is known. Maas, S. L. N., Breakefield, X. O., & Weaver, A. M. (2017). Trends in Cell Biology. Silva, M., Morsci, N., Nguyen, K. C. Q., Rizvi, A., Rongo, C., Hall, D. H., & Barr, M. M. (2017). Current Biology. Wang, J., Kaletsky, R., Silva, M., Williams, A., Haas, L. A., Androwski, R. J., Landis JN, Patrick C, Rashid A, Santiago-Martinez D, Gravato-Nobre M, Hodgkin J, Hall DH, Murphy CT, Barr, M. M. (2015).Current Biology. Wang, J., Silva, M., Haas, L. A., Morsci, N. S., Nguyen, K. C. Q., Hall, D. H., & Barr, M. M. (2014). Current Biology.
[
Biochemistry,
1987]
The major intestinal esterase from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has been purified to essential homogeneity. Starting from whole worms, the overall purification is 9000-fold with a 10% recovery of activity. The esterase is a single polypeptide chain of Mr 60,000 and is stoichiometrically inhibited by organophosphates. Substrate preferences and inhibition patterns classify the enzyme as a carboxylesterase (EC 3.1.1.1), but the physiological function is unknown. The sequence of 13 amino acid residues at the esterase N- terminus has been determined. This partial sequence shows a surprisingly high degree of similarity to the N-terminal sequence of two carboxylesterases recently isolated from Drosophila mojavensis [Pen, J., van Beeumen, J., & Beintema, J. J. (1986) Biochem. J. 238, 691-699].
Arnsburg K, Stank A, Aebersold R, Kirstein J, Scior A, Berynskyy M, Bukau B, Mayer MP, Stengel F, Morimoto RI, Nillegoda NB, Wade RC, Gao X, Szlachcic A, Guilbride DL
[
Nature,
2015]
Protein aggregates are the hallmark of stressed and ageing cells, and characterize several pathophysiological states. Healthy metazoan cells effectively eliminate intracellular protein aggregates, indicating that efficient disaggregation and/or degradation mechanisms exist. However, metazoans lack the key heat-shock protein disaggregase HSP100 of non-metazoan HSP70-dependent protein disaggregation systems, and the human HSP70 system alone, even with the crucial HSP110 nucleotide exchange factor, has poor disaggregation activity in vitro. This unresolved conundrum is central to protein quality control biology. Here we show that synergic cooperation between complexed J-protein co-chaperones of classes A and B unleashes highly efficient protein disaggregation activity in human and nematode HSP70 systems. Metazoan mixed-class J-protein complexes are transient, involve complementary charged regions conserved in the J-domains and carboxy-terminal domains of each J-protein class, and are flexible with respect to subunit composition. Complex formation allows J-proteins to initiate transient higher order chaperone structures involving HSP70 and interacting nucleotide exchange factors. A network of cooperative class A and B J-protein interactions therefore provides the metazoan HSP70 machinery with powerful, flexible, and finely regulatable disaggregase activity and a further level of regulation crucial for cellular protein quality control.