Collisions of Cortical Microtubules with Membrane Associated Myosin VIII Tail

Abstract

The distribution of myosin VIII ATM1 tail in association with the plasma membrane is often observed in coordination with that of cortical microtubules (MTs). The prevailing hypothesis is that coordination between the organization of cortical MTs and proteins in the membrane results from the inhibition of free lateral diffusion of the proteins by barriers formed by MTs. Since the positioning of myosin VIII tail in the membrane is relatively stable, we ask: can it affect the organization of MTs? Myosin VIII ATM1 tail co-localized with remorin 6.6, the position of which in the plasma membrane is also relatively stable. Overexpression of myosin VIII ATM1 tail led to a larger fraction of MTs with a lower rate of orientation dispersion. In addition, collisions between MTs and cortical structures labeled by ATM1 tail or remorin 6.6 were observed. Collisions between EB1 labeled MTs and ATM1 tail clusters led to four possible outcomes: 1—Passage of MTs through the cluster; 2—Decreased elongation rate; 3—Disengagement from the membrane followed by a change in direction; and 4—retraction. EB1 tracks became straighter in the presence of ATM1 tail. Taken together, collisions of MTs with ATM1 tail labeled structures can contribute to their coordinated organization.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jan 03, 2022
Source ID
10.3390/cells11010145

Entities

People

  • Eduard Belausov
  • Einat Sadot
  • Sefi Bar-sinai
  • Vikas Dwivedi

Organizations

  • Israel Science Foundation

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Biology

Readers

  • Computer Networking
  • Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry
  • Nuclear Civil Defense.