Two antagonistic hippo signaling circuits set the division plane at the medial position in the ciliate tetrahymena

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Abstract

In a single cell, ciliates maintain a complex pattern of cortical organelles that are arranged along the anteroposterior and circumferential axes. The underlying molecular mechanisms of intracellular pattern formation in ciliates are largely unknown. Ciliates divide by tandem duplication, a process that remodels the parental cell into two daughters aligned head-to-tail. In the elo1-1 mutant of Tetrahymena thermophila, the segmentation boundary/division plane forms too close to the posterior end of the parental cell, producing a large anterior and a small posterior daughter cell, respectively. We show that ELO1 encodes a Lats/NDR kinase that marks the posterior segment of the cell cortex, where the division plane does not form in the wild-type. Elo1 acts independently of CdaI, a Hippo/ Mst kinase that marks the anterior half of the parental cell, and whose loss shifts the division plane anteriorly. We propose that, in Tetrahymena, two antagonistic Hippo circuits focus the segmentation boundary/division plane at the equatorial position, by excluding divisional morphogenesis from the cortical areas that are too close to cell ends.

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Jiang, Y. Y., Maie, W., Baumeister, R., Joachimiak, E., Ruan, Z., Kannan, N., … Gaertig, J. (2019). Two antagonistic hippo signaling circuits set the division plane at the medial position in the ciliate tetrahymena. Genetics, 211(2), 651–663. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.118.301889

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