Motor-driven marginal band coiling promotes cell shape change during platelet activation. - DyCTim : Dynamique Cellulaire / Tissulaire et Microscopie fonctionnelle Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Cell Biology Année : 2014

Motor-driven marginal band coiling promotes cell shape change during platelet activation.

Résumé

Platelets float in the blood as discoid particles. Their shape is maintained by microtubules organized in a ring structure, the so-called marginal band (MB), in the periphery of resting platelets. Platelets are activated after vessel injury and undergo a major shape change known as disc to sphere transition. It has been suggested that actomyosin tension induces the contraction of the MB to a smaller ring. In this paper, we show that antagonistic microtubule motors keep the MB in its resting state. During platelet activation, dynein slides microtubules apart, leading to MB extension rather than contraction. The MB then starts to coil, thereby inducing the spherical shape of activating platelets. Newly polymerizing microtubules within the coiled MB will then take a new path to form the smaller microtubule ring, in concerted action with actomyosin tension. These results present a new view of the platelet activation mechanism and reveal principal mechanistic features underlying cellular shape changes.

Dates et versions

hal-01002792 , version 1 (06-06-2014)

Identifiants

Citer

Boubou Diagouraga, Alexei Grichine, Arnold Fertin, Jin Wang, Saadi Khochbin, et al.. Motor-driven marginal band coiling promotes cell shape change during platelet activation.. Journal of Cell Biology, 2014, 204 (2), pp.177-85. ⟨10.1083/jcb.201306085⟩. ⟨hal-01002792⟩
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