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doi:10.1534/genetics.105.050955
A more recent version of this article appeared on April 1, 2006.
REGULAR RESEARCH PAPERS |
A role for the septation initiation network in septum assembly revealed by genetic analysis of sid2-250 suppressors
Quan-wen Jin 1, Mian Zhou 1, Andrea Bimbo 2, Mohan K Balasubramanian 2 and Dannel McCollum 3*
1 University of Massachusetts Medical School
2 Temasek Life Sciences Laboratory
3 University of Massachusetts
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: dannel.mccollum{at}umassmed.edu.
Submitted on September 9, 2005
Revised on December 2, 2005
Accepted on 3 January 2006
In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe the septation initiation network (SIN) is required for stabilization of the actomyosin ring in late mitosis as well as well as ring constriction and septum deposition. In a genetic screen for suppressors of the SIN mutant sid2-250, we isolated a mutation, ace2-35, in the transcription factor Ace2p. Both ace2? and ace2-35 show defects in cell separation, and both can rescue the growth defects of some SIN mutants at low restrictive temperatures, where the SIN single mutants lyse at the time of cytokinesis. By detailed analysis of formation and constriction of actomyosin ring and septum in the sid2-250 mutant at low restrictive temperatures, we show that the lysis phenotype of the sid2-250 mutant is likely due to a weak cell wall and septum combined with enzymatic activity of septum degrading enzymes. Consistent with the recent findings that Ace2p controls transcription of genes involved in cell separation, we show that disruption of some of these genes can also rescue sid2-250 mutants. Consistent with SIN mutants having defects in septum formation, many SIN mutants can be rescued at the low restrictive temperature by the osmotic stabilizer sorbitol. The small GTPase Rho1 is known to promote cell wall formation, and we find that Rho1p expressed from a multi-copy plasmid can also rescue sid2-250 at the low restrictive temperature. Together these results suggest that the SIN has a role in promoting proper cell wall formation at the division septa.
Key Words: S. pombe, SIN pathway, Sid2, cell wall formation, cytokinesis