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Published August 2012 | Published
Journal Article Open

Structured illumination of the interface between centriole and peri-centriolar material

Abstract

The increase in centrosome size in mitosis was described over a century ago, and yet it is poorly understood how centrioles, which lie at the core of centrosomes, organize the pericentriolar material (PCM) in this process. Now, structured illumination microscopy reveals in Drosophila that, before clouds of PCM appear, its proteins are closely associated with interphase centrioles in two tube-like layers: an inner layer occupied by centriolar microtubules, Sas-4, Spd-2 and Polo kinase; and an outer layer comprising Pericentrin-like protein (Dplp), Asterless (Asl) and Plk4 kinase. Centrosomin (Cnn) and γ-tubulin associate with this outer tube in G2 cells and, upon mitotic entry, Polo activity is required to recruit them together with Spd-2 into PCM clouds. Cnn is required for Spd-2 to expand into the PCM during this maturation process but can itself contribute to PCM independently of Spd-2. By contrast, the centrioles of spermatocytes elongate from a pre-existing proximal unit during the G2 preceding meiosis. Sas-4 is restricted to the microtubule-associated, inner cylinder and Dplp and Cnn to the outer cylinder of this proximal part. γ-Tubulin and Asl associate with the outer cylinder and Spd-2 with the inner cylinder throughout the entire G2 centriole. Although they occupy different spatial compartments on the G2 centriole, Cnn, Spd-2 and γ-tubulin become diminished at the centriole upon entry into meiosis to become part of PCM clouds.

Additional Information

© 2012 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited. Received: 19 June 2012. Accepted: 2 August 2012. We are very grateful to the Cancer Research UK for support of this work and to the Royal Society for a Newton Post-Doctoral Fellowship to J.F. We also thank the Wellcome Trust for a grant enabling the purchase of the OMX microscope. Thanks are also due to Nicola Lawrence and Alex Sossick for assistance with microscopy. We very much appreciate the advice of Hélène Rangone, Matthew Savoian and Tetsuya Takeda in these experiments and the helpful comments of Paula Coelho and Nick Dzhindzhev on the manuscript. Antibodies were very kindly provided by Jordan Raff (rabbit anti-Sas-4), Tomer Avidor-Reiss (mouse anti-Sas-4), Tim Megraw (anti-Cep135), and fly lines by Mónica Bettencourt-Dias (polyubiquitin GFP-Cep135/CyO); Jordan Raff (polyubiquitin GFP-PACT/CyO).

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August 19, 2023
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