TY - JOUR
T1 - Dynamic remodeling of centrioles and the microtubule cytoskeleton in the lifecycle of chytrid fungi
AU - Long, Alexandra F
AU - Vasudevan, Krishnakumar
AU - Swafford, Andrew
AU - Venard, Claire M
AU - Stajich, Jason E
AU - Fritz-Laylin, Lillian K
AU - Feldman, Jessica L
AU - Stearns, Tim
PY - 2025/8/20
Y1 - 2025/8/20
N2 - Cell movement and division are complex behaviors driven by a dynamic internal cytoskeleton. The molecular components and principles of cytoskeletal assembly are well studied, but less is known about cytoskeletal remodeling events, including how centrioles transition from ciliary base to centrosome. Here we address this using the chytrid
Rhizoclosmatium globosum, a zoosporic fungus which has centrioles and cilia, lost in most fungal lineages. Chytrids undergo reorganization of their microtubule cytoskeleton as they grow from zoospore to multinucleated coenocyte. We use evolutionary comparison, RNA sequencing, and expansion microscopy to understand this reorganization and further develop this organism as a model for evolutionary cell biology. We find that when motile zoospores transition to sessile sporangia, cilia are retracted into the cytoplasm and degraded, while centrioles detach from the ciliary axoneme yet persist. During the mitotic cycles, short centrioles are associated with a centrosome-like microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) and a dense microtubule array at the spindle pole. After the mitotic cycles, centrioles elongate and form cilia, driven by transcription of genes associated with centriole maturation and ciliogenesis, and microtubule bundles are reorganized. Thus, in chytrids structural remodeling of the centriole is temporally coupled to specific changes in cytoskeletal organization over the coenocytic life cycle.
AB - Cell movement and division are complex behaviors driven by a dynamic internal cytoskeleton. The molecular components and principles of cytoskeletal assembly are well studied, but less is known about cytoskeletal remodeling events, including how centrioles transition from ciliary base to centrosome. Here we address this using the chytrid
Rhizoclosmatium globosum, a zoosporic fungus which has centrioles and cilia, lost in most fungal lineages. Chytrids undergo reorganization of their microtubule cytoskeleton as they grow from zoospore to multinucleated coenocyte. We use evolutionary comparison, RNA sequencing, and expansion microscopy to understand this reorganization and further develop this organism as a model for evolutionary cell biology. We find that when motile zoospores transition to sessile sporangia, cilia are retracted into the cytoplasm and degraded, while centrioles detach from the ciliary axoneme yet persist. During the mitotic cycles, short centrioles are associated with a centrosome-like microtubule-organizing center (MTOC) and a dense microtubule array at the spindle pole. After the mitotic cycles, centrioles elongate and form cilia, driven by transcription of genes associated with centriole maturation and ciliogenesis, and microtubule bundles are reorganized. Thus, in chytrids structural remodeling of the centriole is temporally coupled to specific changes in cytoskeletal organization over the coenocytic life cycle.
U2 - 10.1091/mbc.E24-12-0577
DO - 10.1091/mbc.E24-12-0577
M3 - Article
C2 - 40833813
SN - 1059-1524
SP - mbcE24120577
JO - Molecular Biology of the Cell
JF - Molecular Biology of the Cell
ER -