Microtubule-dependent nuclear positioning and nuclear-dependent septum positioning in the fission yeast Saccharomyces pombe

2000 ◽  
Vol 199 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
PT Tran ◽  
V Doye ◽  
F Chang ◽  
S Inoue
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanju Ashraf ◽  
David A. Kelly ◽  
Kenneth E. Sawin

ABSTRACTMovement of the cell nucleus typically involves the cytoskeleton and either polymerization-based pushing forces or motor-based pulling forces. In fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, nuclear movement and positioning are thought to depend on microtubule polymerization-based pushing forces. Here we describe a novel, microtubule-independent, form of nuclear movement in fission yeast. Microtubule-independent nuclear movement is directed towards growing cell tips, and it is strongest when the nucleus is close to a growing cell tip, and weakest when the nucleus is far from that tip. Microtubule-independent nuclear movement requires actin cables but does not depend on actin polymerization-based pushing or myosin V-based pulling forces. Vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP)-associated proteins (VAPs) Scs2 and Scs22, which are critical for endoplasmic reticulum-plasma membrane contact sites in fission yeast, are also required for microtubule-independent nuclear movement. We also find that in cells in which microtubule-based pushing forces are present, disruption of actin cables leads to increased fluctuations in interphase nuclear positioning and subsequent altered septation. Our results suggest two non-exclusive mechanisms for microtubule-independent nuclear movement, which may help illuminate aspects of nuclear positioning in other cells.


2021 ◽  
pp. jcs.253021
Author(s):  
Sanju Ashraf ◽  
Ye Dee Tay ◽  
David A. Kelly ◽  
Kenneth E. Sawin

Movement of the cell nucleus typically involves the cytoskeleton and either polymerization-based pushing forces or motor-based pulling forces. In fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, nuclear movement and positioning are thought to depend on microtubule polymerization-based pushing forces. Here we describe a novel, microtubule-independent, form of nuclear movement in fission yeast. Microtubule-independent nuclear movement is directed towards growing cell tips, and it is strongest when the nucleus is close to a growing cell tip, and weakest when the nucleus is far from that tip. Microtubule-independent nuclear movement requires actin cables but does not depend on actin polymerization-based pushing or myosin V-based pulling forces. Vesicle-associated membrane protein (VAMP)-associated proteins (VAPs) Scs2 and Scs22, which are critical for endoplasmic reticulum-plasma membrane contact sites in fission yeast, are also required for microtubule-independent nuclear movement. We also find that in cells in which microtubule-based pushing forces are present, disruption of actin cables leads to increased fluctuations in interphase nuclear positioning and subsequent altered septation. Our results suggest two non-exclusive mechanisms for microtubule-independent nuclear movement, which may help illuminate aspects of nuclear positioning in other cells.


1997 ◽  
Vol 110 (16) ◽  
pp. 1851-1866 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Hagan ◽  
M. Yanagida

Specific changes in spatial order occur during cell cycle progression in fission yeast. Growth of the rod-shaped cells is highly regulated and undergoes a cell cycle and size-regulated switch from monopolar to bipolar tip extension. During both phases of growth, the interphase nucleus is maintained in a central location. Following the separation of the genome to the cell tips in mitosis, the two nuclei migrate back towards the cell equator before stopping in two new positions that will become the middle of the two new cells. Here we use simultaneous labeling of microtubules, chromatin and spindle pole bodies in wild-type and cdc mutants, to show that nuclear positioning is achieved by regulation of spindle pole body-mediated nuclear migration. We show that the number and location of nuclear positioning signals is regulated in a cell cycle-specific manner and that spindle pole body-mediated forces are likely to be responsible for maintaining correct nuclear position once the nuclei have reached the appropriate position in the cell. Accentuating the movement of the nuclei back towards the cell equator after mitosis by artificially increasing cell length shows that the spindle pole body leads the nucleus during this migration. When multiple spindle pole bodies are associated with the same or different nuclei they all go to the same point indicating that the different spindle pole bodies are responding to the same positional cue. In a septation-defective mutant cell, which contains four nuclei, the spindle pole bodies on the four different nuclei initially group as two pairs in regions that would become the middle of the new cells, were the cell able to divide. In the subsequent interphase, the nuclei aggregate as a group of four in the centre of the cell. The presence of two or three clusters of spindle pole bodies in larger cells with eight nuclei suggests that the mechanisms specifying the normally central location for multiple nuclei may be unable to operate properly as the cells get larger. Perturbation of microtubules with the microtubule poison thiabendazole prevents the spindle pole body clustering in septation mutants, demonstrating that nuclear positioning requires a functional microtubule cytoskeleton.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masashi Yukawa ◽  
Yasuhiro Teratani ◽  
Takashi Toda

SUMMARYProper nuclear positioning is essential for the execution of a wide variety of cellular processes in eukaryotic cells (Gundersen and Worman, 2013; Kopf et al., 2020; Lele et al., 2018). In proliferating mitotic cells, nuclear positioning is crucial for successful cell division. The bipolar spindle, which pulls sister chromatids towards two opposite poles, needs to assemble in the geometrical center of the cell. This ensures symmetrical positioning of the two nuclei that are reformed upon mitotic exit, by which two daughter cells inherit the identical set of the chromosomes upon cytokinesis. In fission yeast, the nucleus is positioned in the cell center during interphase; cytoplasmic microtubules interact with both the nucleus and the cell tips, thereby retaining the nucleus in the medial position of the cell (Daga et al., 2006; Tran et al., 2001). By contrast, how the nucleus is positioned during mitosis remains elusive. Here we show that several cell-cycle mutants that arrest in mitosis all displace the nucleus towards one end of the cell axis. Intriguingly, the actin cytoskeleton, not the microtubule counterpart, is responsible for the asymmetric movement of the nucleus. Time-lapse live imaging indicates that mitosis-specific F-actin cables interact with the nuclear membrane, thereby possibly generating an asymmetrical pushing force. In addition, constriction of the actomyosin ring further promotes nuclear displacement. This nuclear movement is beneficial, because if the nuclei were retained in the cell center, subsequent cell division would impose the lethal cut phenotype (Hirano et al., 1986; Yanagida, 1998), in which chromosomes are intersected by the contractile actin ring and the septum. Thus, fission yeast escapes from mitotic catastrophe by means of actin-dependent nuclear movement.


Author(s):  
Atsuko Shirai ◽  
Akihisa Matsuyama ◽  
Yoko Yashiroda ◽  
Ritsuko Arai ◽  
Minoru Yoshida

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document