Abstract
AU Centrioles: Pleaseconfirmthatallheadinglevelsarerepresentedcorrectly duplicate when a mother centriole gives birth to a: daughter that grows from its side. Polo-like-kinase 4 (PLK4), the master regulator of centriole duplication, is recruited symmetrically around the mother centriole, but it then concentrates at a single focus that defines the daughter centriole assembly site. How PLK4 breaks symmetry is unclear. Here, we propose that phosphorylated and unphosphorylated species of PLK4 form the 2 components of a classical Turing reaction–diffusion system. These 2 components bind to/unbind from the surface of the mother centriole at different rates, allowing a slow-diffusing activator species of PLK4 to accumulate at a single site on the mother, while a fast-diffusing inhibitor species of PLK4 suppresses activator accumulation around the rest of the centriole. This “short-range activation/long-range inhibition,” inherent to Turing systems, can drive PLK4 symmetry breaking on a either a continuous or compartmentalised Plk4-binding surface, with PLK4 overexpression producing multiple PLK4 foci and PLK4 kinase inhibition leading to a lack of symmetry-breaking and PLK4 accumulation—as observed experimentally.
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CITATION STYLE
Wilmott, Z. M., Goriely, A., & Raff, J. W. (2023). A simple Turing reaction–diffusion model explains how PLK4 breaks symmetry during centriole duplication and assembly. PLoS Biology, 21(11 November). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002391
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