4.7 Article

Ooplasmic flow cooperates with transport and anchorage in Drosophila oocyte posterior determination

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 217, Issue 10, Pages 3497-3511

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201709174

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health grant [P40OD018537]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [R01GM052111, R01GM124029]

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The posterior determination of the Drosophila melanogaster embryo is defined by the posterior localization of oskar (osk) mRNA in the oocyte. Defects of its localization result in a lack of germ cells and failure of abdomen specification. A microtubule motor kinesin-1 is essential for osk mRNA posterior localization. Because kinesin-1 is required for two essential functions in the oocyte-transport along microtubules and cytoplasmic streaming-it is unclear how individual kinesin-1 activities contribute to the posterior determination. We examined Staufen, an RNA-binding protein that is colocalized with osk mRNA, as a proxy of posterior determination, and we used mutants that either inhibit kinesin-driven transport along microtubules or cytoplasmic streaming. We demonstrated that late-stage streaming is partially redundant with early-stage transport along microtubules for Staufen posterior localization. Additionally, an actin motor, myosin V, is required for the Staufen anchoring to the actin cortex. We propose a model whereby initial kinesin-driven transport, subsequent kinesin-driven streaming, and myosin V-based cortical retention cooperate in posterior determination.

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