journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24769852/the-special-case-of-hepatocytes-unique-tissue-architecture-calls-for-a-distinct-mode-of-cell-division
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christiaan L Slim, Sven C D van IJzendoorn, Francisco Lázaro-Diéguez, Anne Müsch
Columnar epithelia (e.g., kidney, intestine) and hepatocytes embody the two major organizational phenotypes of non-stratified epithelial cells. Columnar epithelia establish their apical and basal domains at opposing poles and organize in monolayered cysts and tubules, in which their apical surfaces form a single continuous lumen whereas hepatocytes establish their apical domains in the midst of their basolateral domains and organize a highly branched capillary luminal network, the bile canaliculi, in which a single hepatocyte can engage in lumen formation with multiple neighbors...
March 2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24717194/why-does-endocytosis-in-single-cells-care-which-side-up
#22
COMMENT
Kristine Schauer, Bruno Goud
Eukaryotic cells display an asymmetric distribution of cellular compartments relying on their adhesion and the underlying anisotropy of the actin and microtubule cytoskeleton. Studies using a minimal cell culture system based on confined adhesion on micropatterns have illustrated that trafficking compartments are well organized at the single cell level in response to the geometry of cellular adhesion cues. Expanding our analysis on cellular uptake processes, we have found that cellular adhesion additionally defines the topology of endocytosis and signaling...
March 2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24709996/filamin-a-and-big2-a-shared-endocytic-pathway
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Volney L Sheen
Neural proliferation, migration and differentiation require reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton and regulation of vesicle trafficking to provide stability in maintaining cell adhesions, allow for changes in cell shape, and establishing cell polarity. Human disorders involving the actin-binding Filamin A (FLNA) and vesicle trafficking Brefeldin-associated guanine exchange factor 2 (BIG2 is encoded by the ARFGEF2 gene) proteins are implicated in these various developmental processes, resulting in a malformation of cortical development called periventricular heterotopia (nodules along the ventricular lining) and microcephaly (small brain)...
March 2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24618686/the-marriage-of-quantitative-genetics-and-cell-biology-a-novel-screening-approach-reveals-people-have-genetically-encoded-variation-in-microtubule-stability
#24
COMMENT
Dennis C Ko, Sarah L Jaslow
Microtubules play a central role in many essential cellular processes, including chromosome segregation, intracellular transport, and cell polarity. As these dynamic polymers are crucial components of eukaryotic cellular architecture, we were surprised by our recent discovery that a common human genetic difference leads to variation in microtubule stability in cells from different people. A single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) near the TUBB6 gene, encoding class V β-tubulin, is associated with the expression level of this protein, which reduces microtubule stability at higher levels of expression...
March 2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26528729/cortical-depth-and-differential-transport-of-vegetally-localized-dorsal-and-germ-line-determinants-in-the-zebrafish-embryo
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elaine Welch, Francisco Pelegri
In zebrafish embryos, factors involved in both axis induction and primordial germ cell (PGC) development are localized to the vegetal pole of the egg. However, upon egg activation axis induction factors experience an asymmetric off-center shift whereas PGC factors undergo symmetric animally-directed movement. We examined the spatial relationship between the proposed dorsal genes wnt8a and grip2a and the PGC factor dazl at the vegetal cortex. We find that RNAs for these genes localize to different cortical depths, with the RNA for the PGC factor dazl at a deeper cortical level than those for axis-inducing factors...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26430713/competition-and-collaboration-between-different-actin-assembly-pathways-allows-for-homeostatic-control-of-the-actin-cytoskeleton
#26
COMMENT
Jeremy D Rotty, James E Bear
Tremendous insight into actin-associated proteins has come from careful biochemical and cell biological characterization of their activities and regulation. However, many studies of their cellular behavior have only considered each in isolation. Recent efforts reveal that assembly factors compete for polymerization-competent actin monomers, suggesting that actin is homeostatically regulated. It seems that a major regulatory component is competition between Arp2/3-activating nucleation promoting factors and profilin for actin monomers...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26317264/comparative-analysis-of-tools-for-live-cell-imaging-of-actin-network-architecture
#27
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Brittany J Belin, Lauren M Goins, R Dyche Mullins
Fluorescent derivatives of actin and actin-binding domains are powerful tools for studying actin filament architecture and dynamics in live cells. Growing evidence, however, indicates that these probes are biased, and their cellular distribution does not accurately reflect that of the cytoskeleton. To understand the strengths and weaknesses of commonly used live-cell probes--fluorescent protein fusions of actin, Lifeact, F-tractin, and actin-binding domains from utrophin--we compared their distributions in cells derived from various model organisms...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26280982/tropomodulin3-as-the-link-between-insulin-activated-akt2-and-cortical-actin-remodeling-in-preparation-of-glut4-exocytosis
#28
COMMENT
Chun-Yan Lim, Weiping Han
It is well established that insulin-induced remodeling of actin filaments into a cortical mesh is required for insulin-stimulated GLUT4 exocytosis. Akt2 and its downstream effectors play a pivotal role in mediating the translocation and membrane fusion of GLUT4-storage vesicle (GSV). However, the direct downstream effector underlying the event of cortical actin reorganization has not been elucidated. In a recent study in Nature Communications, (1) Lim et al identify Tropomodulin3 (Tmod3) as a downstream target of the Akt2 kinase and describe the role of this pointed-end actin-capping protein in regulating insulin-dependent exocytosis of GSVs in adipocytes through the remodeling of the cortical actin network...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26155737/myosin-light-chains-teaching-old-dogs-new-tricks
#29
REVIEW
Sarah M Heissler, James R Sellers
The myosin holoenzyme is a multimeric protein complex consisting of heavy chains and light chains. Myosin light chains are calmodulin family members which are crucially involved in the mechanoenzymatic function of the myosin holoenzyme. This review examines the diversity of light chains within the myosin superfamily, discusses interactions between the light chain and the myosin heavy chain as well as regulatory and structural functions of the light chain as a subunit of the myosin holoenzyme. It covers aspects of the myosin light chain in the localization of the myosin holoenzyme, protein-protein interactions and light chain binding to non-myosin binding partners...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25997086/gene-expression-homeostasis-and-chromosome-architecture
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aswin Sai Narain Seshasayee
In rapidly growing populations of bacterial cells, including those of the model organism Escherichia coli, genes essential for growth--such as those involved in protein synthesis--are expressed at high levels; this is in contrast to many horizontally-acquired genes, which are maintained at low transcriptional levels. (1) This balance in gene expression states between 2 distinct classes of genes is established by a galaxy of transcriptional regulators, including the so-called nucleoid associated proteins (NAP) that contribute to shaping the chromosome...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25996807/a-role-for-novel-lipid-interactions-in-the-dynamic-recruitment-of-snx27-to-the-t-cell-immune-synapse
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
María Tello-Lafoz, Rajesh Ghai, Brett Collins, Isabel Mérida
SNX27 is a member of the sorting nexin family that plays an important role in the recycling of receptors from endosomes to the cell surface. In addition to a PX (Phox homology) domain that regulates its endosomal localization, SNX27 has a unique PDZ (Psd-95/Dlg/ZO1) domain and an atypical FERM (4.1, ezrin, radixin, moesin) domain that both function to bind short peptide sequence motifs in the cytoplasmic domains of the cargo receptors. Using the T cell immune synapse (IS) as a model for polarized protein recycling, we recently identified an additional mechanism that enhances SNX27 localization to the endosomal recycling compartment (ERC)...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25941938/imperfect-asymmetry-the-mechanism-governing-asymmetric-partitioning-of-damaged-cellular-components-during-mitosis
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sundararaghavan Pattabiraman, Daniel Kaganovich
Aging is universally associated with organism-wide dysfunction and a decline in cellular fitness. From early development onwards, the efficiency of self-repair, energy production, and homeostasis all decrease. Due to the multiplicity of systems that undergo agingrelated decline, the mechanistic basis of organismal aging has been difficult to pinpoint. At the cellular level, however, recent work has provided important insight. Cellular aging is associated with the accumulation of several types of damage, in particular damage to the proteome and organelles...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25759913/a-moving-para-gradient-on-the-nucleoid-directs-subcellular-cargo-transport-via-a-chemophoresis-force
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony G Vecchiarelli, Yeonee Seol, Keir C Neuman, Kiyoshi Mizuuchi
DNA segregation is a critical process for all life, and although there is a relatively good understanding of eukaryotic mitosis, the mechanism in bacteria remains unclear. The small size of a bacterial cell and the number of factors involved in its subcellular organization make it difficult to study individual systems under controlled conditions in vivo. We developed a cell-free technique to reconstitute and visualize bacterial ParA-mediated segregation systems. Our studies provide direct evidence for a mode of transport that does not use a classical cytoskeletal filament or motor protein...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25759912/emergent-properties-of-composite-semiflexible-biopolymer-networks
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mikkel H Jensen, Eliza J Morris, Robert D Goldman, David A Weitz
The semiflexible polymers filamentous actin (F-actin) and intermediate filaments (IF) both form complex networks within the cell, and together are key determinants of cellular stiffness. While the mechanics of F-actin networks together with stiff microtubules have been characterized, the interplay between F-actin and IF networks is largely unknown, necessitating the study of composite networks using mixtures of semiflexible biopolymers. We employ bulk rheology in a simplified in vitro system to uncover the fundamental mechanical interactions between networks of the 2 semiflexible polymers, F-actin and vimentin IF...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25759911/beyond-apoptosis-the-mechanism-and-function-of-phosphatidylserine-asymmetry-in-the-membrane-of-activating-mast-cells
#35
REVIEW
Noel M Rysavy, Lori M N Shimoda, Alyssa M Dixon, Mark Speck, Alexander J Stokes, Helen Turner, Eric Y Umemoto
Loss of plasma membrane asymmetry is a hallmark of apoptosis, but lipid bilayer asymmetry and loss of asymmetry can contribute to numerous cellular functions and responses that are independent of programmed cell death. Exofacial exposure of phosphatidylserine occurs in lymphocytes and mast cells after antigenic stimulation and in the absence of apoptosis, suggesting that there is a functional requirement for phosphatidylserine exposure in immunocytes. In this review we examine current ideas as to the nature of this functional role in mast cell activation...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25715331/force-control-at-cellular-membranes
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Milos Galic, Isabell Begemann, Abhiyan Viplav, Maja Matis
Force-regulation at cellular membranes relies on dynamic molecular platforms that integrate intra- and extracellular signals to control cell shape and function. To correctly respond to a continuously changing environment, activity of these platforms needs to be tightly controlled in space and time. Over the last few years, curvature-dependent mechano-chemical signal translation—a receptor-independent signaling mechanism where physical forces at the plasma membrane trigger nanoscale membrane deformations that are then translated into chemical signal transduction cascades—has emerged as a new signaling principle that cells use to regulate forces at the membrane...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25714005/nuclear-architecture-and-gene-silencing-in-olfactory-sensory-neurons
#37
COMMENT
Lucia M Armelin-Correa, Maíra H Nagai, Artur G Leme Silva, Bettina Malnic
Odorants are discriminated by hundreds of odorant receptor (OR) genes, which are dispersed throughout the mammalian genome. The OR genes are expressed in a highly specialized type of cell, the olfactory sensory neuron. Each one of these neurons expresses one of the 2 alleles from one single OR gene type. The mechanisms underlying OR gene expression are unclear. Here we describe recent work demonstrating that the olfactory sensory neuron shows a particular nuclear architecture, and that the genomic OR loci are colocalized in silencing heterochromatin compartments within the nucleus...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25664996/synthetic-polyamines-new-compounds-specific-to-actin-dynamics-for-mammalian-cell-and-fission-yeast
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Riveline, Raghavan Thiagarajan, Jean-Marie Lehn, Marie-France Carlier
Actin is a major actor in the determination of cell shape. On the one hand, site-directed assembly/disassembly cycles of actin filaments drive protrusive force leading to lamellipodia and filopodia dynamics. Force produced by actin similarly contributes in membrane scission in endocytosis or Golgi remodeling. On the other hand, cellular processes like adhesion, immune synapse, cortex dynamics or cytokinesis are achieved by combining acto-myosin contractility and actin assembly in a complex and not fully understood manner...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25551177/plant-pathogenic-bacteria-target-the-actin-microfilament-network-involved-in-the-trafficking-of-disease-defense-components
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joanna Jelenska, Yongsung Kang, Jean T Greenberg
Cells of infected organisms transport disease defense-related molecules along actin filaments to deliver them to their sites of action to combat the pathogen. To accommodate higher demand for intracellular traffic, plant F-actin density increases transiently during infection or treatment of Arabidopsis with pathogen-associated molecules. Many animal and plant pathogens interfere with actin polymerization and depolymerization to avoid immune responses. Pseudomonas syringae, a plant extracellular pathogen, injects HopW1 effector into host cells to disrupt the actin cytoskeleton and reduce vesicle movement in order to elude defense responses...
2014: Bioarchitecture
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25454897/organized-chaos-in-kupffer-s-vesicle-how-a-heterogeneous-structure-achieves-consistent-left-right-patterning
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
D J Smith, T D Montenegro-Johnson, S S Lopes
Successful establishment of left-right asymmetry is crucial to healthy vertebrate development. In many species this process is initiated in a ciliated, enclosed cavity, for example Kupffer's vesicle (KV) in zebrafish. The microarchitecture of KV is more complex than that present in the left-right organizer of many other species. While swirling flow in KV is recognized as essential for left-right patterning, its generation, nature and conversion to asymmetric gene expression are only beginning to be fully understood...
2014: Bioarchitecture
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