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  4. The kinetically dominant assembly pathway for centrosomal asters in Caenorhabditis elegans is gamma-tubulin dependent
 
research article

The kinetically dominant assembly pathway for centrosomal asters in Caenorhabditis elegans is gamma-tubulin dependent

Hannak, E.
•
Oegema, K.
•
Kirkham, M.
Show more
2002
Journal of Cell Biology

gamma-Tubulin-containing complexes are thought to nucleate and anchor centrosomal microtubules (MTs). Surprisingly, a recent study (Strome, S., J. Powers, M. Dunn, K. Reese, C.J. Malone, J. White, G. Seydoux, and W. Saxton. Mol. Biol. Cell. 12:1751-1764) showed that centrosomal asters form in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos depleted of gamma-tubulin by RNA-mediated interference (RNAi). Here, we investigate the nucleation and organization of centrosomal MT asters in C. elegans embryos severely compromised for gamma-tubulin function. We characterize embryos depleted of approximately 98% centrosomal gamma-tubulin by RNAi, embryos expressing a mutant form of gamma-tubulin, and embryos depleted of a gamma-tubulin-associated protein, CeGrip-1. In all cases, centrosomal asters fail to form during interphase but assemble as embryos enter mitosis. The formation of these mitotic asters does not require ZYG-9, a centrosomal MT-associated protein, or cytoplasmic dynein, a minus end-directed motor that contributes to self-organization of mitotic asters in other organisms. By kinetically monitoring MT regrowth from cold-treated mitotic centrosomes in vivo, we show that centrosomal nucleating activity is severely compromised by gamma-tubulin depletion. Thus, although unknown mechanisms can support partial assembly of mitotic centrosomal asters, gamma-tubulin is the kinetically dominant centrosomal MT nucleator.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1083/jcb.200202047
PubMed ID

12011109

Author(s)
Hannak, E.
Oegema, K.
Kirkham, M.
Gönczy, P.  
Habermann, B.
Hyman, A. A.
Date Issued

2002

Published in
Journal of Cell Biology
Volume

157

Issue

4

Start page

591

End page

602

Subjects

Animals

•

Caenorhabditis elegans/*genetics/metabolism

•

Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics/metabolism

•

Centrosome/*metabolism

•

Down-Regulation/physiology

•

Dynein ATPase/genetics/metabolism

•

Fluorescent Antibody Technique

•

Helminth Proteins/genetics/metabolism

•

Kinetics

•

Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics/metabolism

•

Microtubules/genetics/*metabolism

•

Mitosis/*physiology

•

Mitotic Spindle Apparatus/genetics/*metabolism

•

Molecular Sequence Data

•

Mutation/*physiology

•

Phenotype

•

Phylogeny

•

Point Mutation/genetics

•

RNA/genetics

•

Research Support

•

Non-U.S. Gov't

•

Sequence Homology

•

Amino Acid

•

Signal Transduction/genetics

•

Tubulin/*deficiency/genetics

Note

Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, 01307 Dresden, Germany.

Journal Article

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPGON  
Available on Infoscience
August 24, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/233779
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