Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3399233 Current Opinion in Microbiology 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Fungal tip growth underlies substrate invasion and is essential for fungal virulence. It requires the activity of molecular motors that deliver secretory vesicles to the growth region or which mediate bi-directional motility of early endosomes. Visualizing motors and their cargo in living fungal cells revealed unexpected cooperation between motors in membrane trafficking: (1) Class V chitin synthase, which has a class 17 myosin motor domain, moves bi-directionally, with myosin-5 and kinesin-1 cooperating in delivery to the growth region, and dynein taking it back to the cell centre. The myosin-17 motor domain competes with dynein by tethering the chitin synthase to the plasma membrane before exocytosis; (2) Long-range endosome motility is based on a cooperation of kinesin-3 and dynein, but towards the microtubule plus-end dynein competes with kinesin-3 to prevent the organelles from ‘falling off the track’. These results reveal a fine-balanced network of cooperative and competitive motor activity, required for fungal morphogenesis.

► Motor cooperation occurs between the same motor type on a single early endosome to increase the run-length. ► Actin- and microtubule-dependent motors cooperate by transporting the same cargo along different cytoskeletal fibres. ► Motors can cooperate by recycling each other to opposite poles of microtubules.

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