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- Actomyosin organelle functions of SPIRE actin nucleators precede animal evolution
Actomyosin organelle functions of SPIRE actin nucleators precede animal evolution
Authors
Martin Kollmar, Tobias Welz, Aishwarya Ravi, Thomas Kaufmann, Noura Alzahofi, Klas Hatje, Asmahan Alghamdi, Jiyu Kim, Deborah A. Briggs, Annette Samol-Wolf, Olena Pylypenko, Alistair N. Hume, Pawel Burkhardt, Jan Faix, Eugen Kerkhoff
Abstract
Abstract
An important question in cell biology is how cytoskeletal proteins evolved and drove the development of novel structures and functions. Here we address the origin of SPIRE actin nucleators. Mammalian SPIREs work with RABÂ GTPases, formin (FMN)-subgroup actin assembly proteins and class-5 myosin (MYO5) motors to transport organelles along actin filaments towards the cell membrane. However, the origin and extent of functional conservation of SPIRE among species is unknown. Our sequence searches show that SPIRE exist throughout holozoans (animals and their closest single-celled relatives), but not other eukaryotes. SPIRE from unicellular holozoans (choanoflagellate), interacts with RAB, FMN and MYO5 proteins, nucleates actin filaments and complements mammalian SPIRE function in organelle transport. Meanwhile SPIRE and MYO5 proteins colocalise to organelles in