Eukaryotic cells assemble actomyosin rings during cytokinesis to function as force-generating machines to drive membrane invagination and to counteract the intracellular pressure and the cell surface tension. How the extracellular matrix affects actomyosin ring contraction has not been fully explored. While studying the Schizosaccharomyces pombe 1,3-β-glucan-synthase mutant cps1-191, which is defective in division septum synthesis and arrests with a stable actomyosin ring, we found that weakening of the extracellular glycan matrix caused the generated spheroplasts to divide under the nonpermissive condition. This nonmedial slow division was dependent on a functional actomyosin ring and vesicular trafficking, but independent of normal septum synthesis. Interestingly, the high intracellular turgor pressure appears to play a minimal role in inhibiting ring contraction in the absence of cell wall remodeling in cps1-191 mutants, as decreasing the turgor pressure alone did not enable spheroplast division. We propose that during cytokinesis, the extracellular glycan matrix re-stricts actomyosin ring contraction and membrane ingression, and remodeling of the extracellular components through division septum synthesis relieves the inhibition and facilitates actomyosin ring contraction.
CITATION STYLE
Chew, T. G., Lim, T. C., Osaki, Y., Huang, J., Kamnev, A., Hatano, T., … Balasubramanian, M. K. (2020). Inhibition of cell membrane ingression at the division site by cell walls in fission yeast. Molecular Biology of the Cell, 31(21), 2306–2314. https://doi.org/10.1091/mbc.E20-04-0245
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