INVESTIGADORES
DITAMO Yanina
artículos
Título:
Telomere-led meiotic chromosome movements: recent update in structure and function
Autor/es:
LEE, C. Y.; BISIG, C. G.; CONRAD, M. N.; DITAMO, Y.; PREVIATO DE ALMEIDA, L.; DRESSER, M. E.; PEZZA, R. J.
Revista:
Nucleus
Editorial:
Taylor and Francis Group
Referencias:
Año: 2020 vol. 11 p. 111 - 116
ISSN:
1949-1034
Resumen:
In S. cerevisiae prophase meiotic chromosomes move by forces generated in the cytoplasm and transduced to the telomere via a protein complex located in the nuclear membrane. We know that chromosome movements require actin cytoskeleton [13,31] and the proteins Ndj1, Mps3, and Csm4. Until recently, the identity of the protein connecting Ndj1-Mps3 with the cytoskeleton components was missing. It was also not known the identity of a cytoplasmic motor responsible for interacting with the actin cytoskeleton and a protein at the outer nuclear envelope. Our recent work [36] identified Mps2 as the protein connecting Ndj1-Mps3 with cytoskeleton components; Myo2 as the cytoplasmic motor that interacts with Mps2; and Cms4 as a regulator of Mps2 and Myo2 interaction and activities (Figure 1). Below we present a model for how Mps2, Csm4, and Myo2 promote chromosome movements by providing the primary connections joining telomeres to the actin cytoskeleton through the LINC complex.