Sepoy-logo
No Result
View All Result
Sunday, March 26, 2023
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
  • Economy
  • Crypto
  • Travel
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
  • Economy
  • Crypto
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
SEPOY.NET
No Result
View All Result
Home Health

Smart molecular glue ensures the nucleus is correctly positioned for cell division

Nicholas by Nicholas
December 19, 2022
in Health
0
Smart molecular glue ensures the nucleus is correctly positioned for cell division

Researchers from Paul Scherrer Institute PSI and ETH Zurich have discovered how proteins in the cell can form tiny liquid droplets that act as a smart molecular glue. Clinging to the ends of filaments called microtubules, the glue they discovered ensures the nucleus is correctly positioned for cell division. The findings, published in Nature Cell Biology, explain the long-standing mystery of how moving protein structures of the cell’s machinery are coupled together.

Couplings are critical to machines with moving parts. Rigid or flexible, whether the connection between the shafts in a motor or the joints in our body, the material properties ensure that mechanical forces are transduced as desired. Nowhere is this better optimised than in the cell, where the interactions between moving subcellular structures underpin many biological processes. Yet how nature makes this coupling has long baffled scientists.

Now researchers, investigating a coupling crucial for yeast cell division, have revealed that to do this, proteins collaborate such that they condense into a liquid droplet. The study was a collaboration between the teams of Michel Steinmetz at Paul Scherrer Institute PSI and Yves Barral at ETH Zurich, with the help of the groups of Eric Dufresne and Jörg Stelling, both at ETH Zurich.

By forming a liquid droplet, the proteins achieve the perfect material properties to ensure biological function. This discovery is just the beginning of a new understanding of the role smart liquids play in the cell, believes Barral, whose research group is investigating the process of cell division in yeast. “We are finding out that liquids composed of biomolecules can be extremely sophisticated and show a much broader variety of properties than we are used to from our macroscopic point of view. In that respect, I think we will find that these liquids have impressive properties that have been selected by evolution over 100s of millions of years.”

Microtubules: the cell’s towropes

The study focuses on a coupling that occurs at the ends of microtubules – filaments that criss-cross the cell’s cytoplasm and have an unsettling resemblance to alien tentacles. These hollow tubes, formed from the building block tubulin, act as towropes, transporting various cargo across the cell.

Microtubules receive one of their most critical cargo during cell division. In yeast, they have the important job of dragging the nucleus, containing the dividing chromosomes, between mother and budding daughter cell. To do this, the microtubule must connect, via a motor protein, to an actin cable anchored in the cell membrane of the emerging daughter cell. The motor protein then walks along the actin cable, pulling the microtubule into the daughter cell until its precious cargo of genetic material reaches its intended destination between the two cells.

This coupling – essential for cell division to proceed – must withstand the tension as the motor protein walks and enable the nucleus to be delicately maneuvered. Michel Steinmetz, whose research group at PSI are experts in the structural biology of microtubules, explains: “Between microtubule and motor protein, there needs to be a glue. Without it, if the microtubule detaches, you will end up with a daughter cell with no genetic material that will not survive.”

Nature’s flexible coupling

In yeast, three proteins, which form the core of the so-called Kar9 network, decorate the microtubule tip in order to achieve this coupling. How they achieve the necessary material properties seemed to contradict traditional understanding of protein interactions.

One question that had long intrigued scientists was how the three core Kar9 network proteins stay attached to the microtubule tip even when tubulin subunits are added or removed: equivalent to the hook at the end of a towrope remaining in place whilst adjacent sections of rope are inserted or snipped off. Here, their discovery provides an answer: as a drop of liquid glue would cling to the end of a pencil, so this protein ‘liquid’ can cling to the end of the microtubule even as it grows or shrinks.

The researchers discovered that to achieve this liquid property, the three core Kar9 network proteins collaborate through a web of weak interactions. As the proteins interact at a number of different points, if one interaction fails, others remain and the ‘glue’ largely persists. This imparts the flexibility required for the microtubule to stay attached to the motor protein even under tension, the researchers believe.

To make their discovery, the researchers methodically probed the interactions between the three protein components of the Kar9 network. Based on structural knowledge obtained at the Swiss Light Source SLS in previous studies, they could mutate the proteins to selectively remove interaction sites and observe the effects in vivo and in vitro.

In solution, the three proteins came together to form distinct droplets, like oil in water. To prove that this was occurring in yeast cells, the researchers investigated the effect of mutations on cell division and the ability of the proteins to track the end of a shrinking microtubule.

“It was fairly straightforward to prove the proteins were interacting to form a liquid condensate in vitro. But it was a huge challenge to provide compelling evidence that this is what was happening in vivo, which took us several years,” explains Steinmetz, who first postulated the idea of a ‘liquid protein glue’ for microtubule-tip binding proteins together with a colleague from the Netherlands in a 2015 review publication.

Not your bog-standard multipurpose glue

Barral is struck by how sophisticated the glue is. “It is not just a glue, but it is a smart glue, which is able to integrate spatial information to form only at the right place.” Within the complex tangle of identical microtubules in the cell cytoplasm, just one microtubule receives the droplet that enables it to attach to the actin cable and pull the genetic information into place. “How nature manages to assemble a complex structure on the end of just one microtubule, and not others, is mindboggling,” he emphasizes.

The researchers believe that the liquid property of the proteins plays an important role in achieving this specificity. In the same way that small oil droplets in a vinaigrette fuse together, they hypothesize that small droplets initially form on many microtubules, which somehow subsequently converge to form one larger droplet on a single microtubule. How exactly this is achieved remains a mystery and is the subject of investigations in the Steinmetz and Barral teams.

Source:

Journal reference:

Meier, S.M., et al. (2022) Multivalency ensures persistence of a +TIP body at specialized microtubule ends. Nature Cell Biology. doi.org/10.1038/s41556-022-01035-2.

READ ALSO

Tulane receives up to $16 million to move nasal pneumonia vaccine from the lab to clinical trials

TTUHSC El Paso scientist receives $2.6 million NIH grant for research on tuberculosis

Tags: ActinCellCell BiologyCell DivisionCytoplasmDaughter CellGeneticin vitroin vivoProteinResearchYeast

Related Posts

Tulane receives up to  million to move nasal pneumonia vaccine from the lab to clinical trials
Health

Tulane receives up to $16 million to move nasal pneumonia vaccine from the lab to clinical trials

March 24, 2023
TTUHSC El Paso scientist receives .6 million NIH grant for research on tuberculosis
Health

TTUHSC El Paso scientist receives $2.6 million NIH grant for research on tuberculosis

March 24, 2023
Substance use disorders not associated with COVID-19-related mortality
Health

Substance use disorders not associated with COVID-19-related mortality

March 24, 2023
Researchers secure .5 mllion from NIH HEAL initiative to tackle opioid and pain public health crises
Health

Researchers secure $7.5 mllion from NIH HEAL initiative to tackle opioid and pain public health crises

March 24, 2023
Researchers discover a new switching point that regulates hemostasis and thrombosis
Health

Researchers discover a new switching point that regulates hemostasis and thrombosis

March 24, 2023
Blacks and low-income Americans may reap the most benefits from stronger rules for air pollution
Health

Blacks and low-income Americans may reap the most benefits from stronger rules for air pollution

March 24, 2023
Next Post
Understanding why young cancer survivors often opt out of HPV vaccination

Understanding why young cancer survivors often opt out of HPV vaccination

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POPULAR NEWS

Roblox Is Unbreakable Trello Is this safe?

Roblox Is Unbreakable Trello Is this safe?

November 4, 2022
Discord Registered Games  Discord Registered Gaming You need to join the Club

Discord Registered Games Discord Registered Gaming You need to join the Club

November 4, 2022
How To Chose the Right Data Analytics Program

How To Chose the Right Data Analytics Program

November 4, 2022
Chandrashekhar Guruji Wiki, Age, Girlfriend, Wife, Family, Biography & More

Chandrashekhar Guruji Wiki, Age, Girlfriend, Wife, Family, Biography & More

November 4, 2022
Heavy explosion on market square in Halle – three injured

Heavy explosion on market square in Halle – three injured

November 4, 2022

EDITOR'S PICK

More races than ever before: how Formula 1 works

September 24, 2022

Alleged oil leak: Gazprom is not delivering any gas through Nord Stream 1 for the time being

September 2, 2022

How does knowing which financial phases of life you are in help plan your finances better

September 9, 2022

Top Veggies and Fruits Kids Hate and How to Make Them Kid-Friendly!

October 11, 2022

About

Sepoy.net is a perfect place for people who want daily updates on news related to business, technology, entertainment, health, cryptocurrency etc.

Contact: [email protected]

Major Categories

News

Business

Tech

Economy

 

Recent Posts

  • German surprise success: golf talent Bachem wins on the World Tour
  • Ann Lesley Smith Pics, Age, Photos, Biography, Pictures, Wikipedia
  • Who is Amritpal Singh? Pics, Age, Photos, Marriage, Wife, Wikipedia, Pictures, Biography

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy

© 2023 Sepoy.net

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • News
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel

© 2023 Sepoy.net