'(fluorescent micrograph) • Green: septins (
AgSEP7-GFP) • Red: cell outline (
phase contrast) • Scale bar: 10 μm There are seven different septins in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Five of those are involved in mitosis, while two (Spr3 and Spr28) are specific to
sporulation. The septin cortex undergoes several changes throughout the
cell cycle: The first visible septin structure is a distinct ring which appears ~15 min before
bud emergence. After
bud emergence, the ring broadens to assume the shape of an
hourglass around the mother-bud neck. During
cytokinesis, the septin cortex splits into a double ring which eventually disappears. How can the septin cortex undergo such dramatic changes, although some of its functions may require it to be a stable structure?
FRAP analysis has revealed that the turnover of septins at the neck undergoes multiple changes during the
cell cycle. The predominant, functional conformation is characterized by a low turnover rate (frozen state), during which the septins are
phosphorylated. Structural changes require a destabilization of the septin cortex (fluid state) induced by
dephosphorylation prior to
bud emergence, ring splitting and
cell separation. The composition of the septin cortex does not only vary throughout the
cell cycle but also along the mother-bud axis. This polarity of the septin network allows concentration of some
proteins primarily to the mother side of the neck, some to the center and others to the
bud site.
Functions Scaffold The septins act as a scaffold, recruiting many
proteins. These protein complexes are involved in
cytokinesis,
chitin deposition,
cell polarity,
spore formation, in the
morphogenesis checkpoint,
spindle alignment
checkpoint and bud site selection.
Cytokinesis Budding yeast
cytokinesis is driven through two septin dependent, redundant processes: recruitment and contraction of the
actomyosin ring and formation of the
septum by
vesicle fusion with the
plasma membrane. In contrast to septin
mutants, disruption of one single pathway only leads to a delay in
cytokinesis, not complete failure of
cell division. Hence, the septins are predicted to act at the most upstream level of
cytokinesis.
Cell polarity After the
isotropic-
apical switch in
budding yeast,
cortical components, supposedly of the
exocyst and
polarisome, are delocalized from the apical pole to the entire
plasma membrane of the bud, but not the mother cell. The septin ring at the neck serves as a cortical barrier that prevents membrane
diffusion of these factors between the two compartments. This asymmetric distribution is abolished in septin
mutants. Some conditional septin
mutants do not form
buds at their normal axial location. Moreover, the typical localization of some bud-site-selection factors in a double ring at the neck is lost or disturbed in these
mutants. This indicates that the septins may serve as anchoring site for such factors in axially
budding cells. == In filamentous fungi ==