act2 | GeneID:2543233 | Schizosaccharomyces pombe
Gene Summary
[
] NCBI Entrez Gene
| Gene ID | 2543233 | Official Symbol | act2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Locus | SPAC630.03 | Gene Type | protein-coding |
| Synonyms | arp3 | ||
| Full Name | N/A | ||
| Description | actin-like protein Arp3 | ||
| Chromosome | N/A | ||
| Also Known As | |||
| Summary | N/A | ||
Orthologs and Paralogs
[
] Homologs - NCBI's HomoloGene Group: 4180
| ID | Symbol | Protein | Species |
|---|---|---|---|
| GeneID:57180 | ACTR3B | NP_065178.1 | Homo sapiens |
| GeneID:242894 | Actr3b | NP_001004365.1 | Mus musculus |
| GeneID:362298 | Actr3b | XP_342612.2 | Rattus norvegicus |
| GeneID:420439 | ACTR3B | XP_418544.1 | Gallus gallus |
| GeneID:475549 | ACTR3B | XP_532772.2 | Canis lupus familiaris |
| GeneID:616404 | ACTR3B | XP_873511.2 | Bos taurus |
| GeneID:738748 | ACTR3B | XP_001144350.1 | Pan troglodytes |
| GeneID:837876 | DIS1 | NP_172777.1 | Arabidopsis thaliana |
| GeneID:853528 | ARP3 | NP_012599.1 | Saccharomyces cerevisiae |
| GeneID:2543233 | act2 | NP_592898.1 | Schizosaccharomyces pombe |
| GeneID:2677366 | MGG_03879 | XP_361405.2 | Magnaporthe grisea |
| GeneID:2709915 | NCU01756.1 | XP_328195.1 | Neurospora crassa |
| GeneID:2897025 | KLLA0B13904g | XP_452150.1 | Kluyveromyces lactis |
| GeneID:4329867 | Os02g0596900 | NP_001047323.1 | Oryza sativa |
| GeneID:4622239 | AGOS_AFR419C | NP_985966.1 | Eremothecium gossypii |
| GeneID:100038776 | zgc:158823 | NP_001083025.1 | Danio rerio |
Gene Classification
[
] Gene Ontology
| ID | Category | GO Term |
|---|---|---|
| GO:0030479 | Component | actin cortical patch |
| GO:0005885 | Component | Arp2/3 protein complex |
| GO:0005737 | Component | cytoplasm |
| GO:0005829 | Component | cytosol |
| GO:0003779 | Function | actin binding |
| GO:0005524 | Function | ATP binding |
| GO:0005515 | Function | protein binding |
| GO:0000147 | Process | actin cortical patch assembly |
| GO:0000915 | Process | cytokinesis, contractile ring formation |
| GO:0007163 | Process | establishment or maintenance of cell polarity |
| GO:0030833 | Process | regulation of actin filament polymerization |
RefSeq Isoforms
[
] RefSeq Annotation and UniProt Database
| No. | RefSeq RNA | RefSeq Protein | UniProt Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | NM_001018298 | NP_592898 | |
Selected Publications
[
] Gene-related publications indexed at PubMed
- [
] Matsuyama A, et al. (2006) "ORFeome cloning and global analysis of protein localization in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe." Nat Biotechnol. 24(7):841-847. PMID:16823372 - [
] Aslett M, et al. (2006) "Gene Ontology annotation status of the fission yeast genome: preliminary coverage approaches 100%." Yeast. 23(13):913-919. PMID:17072883 - [
] Sirotkin V, et al. (2005) "Interactions of WASp, myosin-I, and verprolin with Arp2/3 complex during actin patch assembly in fission yeast." J Cell Biol. 170(4):637-648. PMID:16087707 - [
] Wood V, et al. (2002) "The genome sequence of Schizosaccharomyces pombe." Nature. 415(6874):871-880. PMID:11859360 - [
] Pelham RJ, et al. (2002) "Actin dynamics in the contractile ring during cytokinesis in fission yeast." Nature. 419(6902):82-86. PMID:12214236 - [
] Feoktistova A, et al. (1999) "Identification and characterization of Schizosaccharomyces pombe asp1(+), a gene that interacts with mutations in the Arp2/3 complex and actin." Genetics. 152(3):895-908. PMID:10388810 - [
] Morrell JL, et al. (1999) "A mutant of Arp2p causes partial disassembly of the Arp2/3 complex and loss of cortical actin function in fission yeast." Mol Biol Cell. 10(12):4201-4215. PMID:10588653 - [
] Balasubramanian MK, et al. (1996) "Fission yeast Sop2p: a novel and evolutionarily conserved protein that interacts with Arp3p and modulates profilin function." EMBO J. 15(23):6426-6437. PMID:8978670 - [
] McCollum D, et al. (1996) "The Schizosaccharomyces pombe actin-related protein, Arp3, is a component of the cortical actin cytoskeleton and interacts with profilin." EMBO J. 15(23):6438-6446. PMID:8978671
Cloning of the entire set of an organism's protein-coding open reading frames (ORFs), or 'ORFeome', is a means of connecting the genome to downstream 'omics' applications. Here we report a proteome-scale study of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe based on cloning of the ORFeome. Taking advantage of a recombination-based cloning system, we obtained 4,910 ORFs in a form that is readily usable in various analyses. First, we evaluated ORF prediction in the fission yeast genome project by expressing each ORF tagged at the 3' terminus. Next, we determined the localization of 4,431 proteins, corresponding to approximately 90% of the fission yeast proteome, by tagging each ORF with the yellow fluorescent protein. Furthermore, using leptomycin B, an inhibitor of the nuclear export protein Crm1, we identified 285 proteins whose localization is regulated by Crm1.
In this review, we present an overview of the Gene Ontology (GO) structure and describe how the GO is implemented for Sz. pombe and made available via Sz. pombe GeneDB (http://www.genedb.org/genedb/pombe/). We give a detailed progress report of Sz. pombe GO annotation, providing the current status of both manual and automatic annotations. Fission yeast has at least one GO annotation for 98.3% of its genes (excluding annotations to 'unknown' terms), greater than the current percentage coverage for any other organism. Approximately 65% (3225 gene products) have at least one annotation to each of the three ontologies (biological process, cellular component and molecular function). Approximately 30% (1443 gene products) have GO terms derived directly from small-scale experiments in fission yeast, supporting the validity of fission yeast as a model eukaryote and a reference organism.
Yeast actin patches are dynamic structures that form at the sites of cell growth and are thought to play a role in endocytosis. We used biochemical analysis and live cell imaging to investigate actin patch assembly in fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Patch assembly proceeds via two parallel pathways: one dependent on WASp Wsp1p and verprolin Vrp1p converges with another dependent on class 1 myosin Myo1p to activate the actin-related protein 2/3 (Arp2/3) complex. Wsp1p activates Arp2/3 complex via a conventional mechanism, resulting in branched filaments. Myo1p is a weaker Arp2/3 complex activator that makes unstable branches and is enhanced by verprolin. During patch assembly in vivo, Wsp1p and Vrp1p arrive first independent of Myo1p. Arp2/3 complex associates with nascent activator patches over 6-9 s while remaining stationary. After reaching a maximum concentration, Arp2/3 complex patches move centripetally as activator proteins dissociate. Genetic dependencies of patch formation suggest that patch formation involves cross talk between Myo1p and Wsp1p/Vrp1p pathways.
We have sequenced and annotated the genome of fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces pombe), which contains the smallest number of protein-coding genes yet recorded for a eukaryote: 4,824. The centromeres are between 35 and 110 kilobases (kb) and contain related repeats including a highly conserved 1.8-kb element. Regions upstream of genes are longer than in budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), possibly reflecting more-extended control regions. Some 43% of the genes contain introns, of which there are 4,730. Fifty genes have significant similarity with human disease genes; half of these are cancer related. We identify highly conserved genes important for eukaryotic cell organization including those required for the cytoskeleton, compartmentation, cell-cycle control, proteolysis, protein phosphorylation and RNA splicing. These genes may have originated with the appearance of eukaryotic life. Few similarly conserved genes that are important for multicellular organization were identified, suggesting that the transition from prokaryotes to eukaryotes required more new genes than did the transition from unicellular to multicellular organization.
Cytokinesis in many eukaryotes requires a contractile ring of actin and myosin that cleaves the cell in two. Little is known about how actin filaments and other components assemble into this ring structure and generate force. Here we show that the contractile ring in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is an active site of actin assembly. This actin polymerization activity requires Arp3, the formin Cdc12, profilin and WASP, but not myosin II or IQGAP proteins. Both newly polymerized actin filaments and pre-existing actin cables can contribute to the initial assembly of the ring. Once formed, the ring remains a dynamic structure in which actin and other ring components continuously assemble and disassemble from the ring every minute. The rate of actin polymerization can influence the rate of cleavage. Thus, actin polymerization driven by the Arp2/3 complex and formins is a central process in cytokinesis. Our studies show that cytokinesis is a more dynamic process than previously thought and provide a perspective on the mechanism of cell division.
The Arp2/3 complex is an essential component of the actin cytoskeleton in yeast and is required for the movement of actin patches. In an attempt to identify proteins that interact with this complex in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, we sought high-copy suppressors of the S. pombe arp3-c1 mutant, and have identified one, which we have termed asp1(+). The asp1(+) open reading frame (ORF) predicts a highly conserved protein of 921 amino acids with a molecular mass of 106 kD that does not contain motifs of known function. Neither asp1(+) nor its apparent Saccharomyces cerevisiae ortholog, VIP1, are essential genes. However, disruption of asp1(+) leads to altered morphology and growth properties at elevated temperatures and defects in polarized growth. The asp1 disruption strain also is hypersensitive to Ca+ ions and to low pH conditions. Although Asp1p is not stably associated with the Arp2/3 complex nor localized in any discrete structure within the cytoplasm, the asp1 disruption mutant was synthetically lethal with mutations in components of the Arp2/3 complex, arp3-c1 and sop2-1, as well as with a mutation in actin, act1-48. Moreover, the vip1 disruption strain showed a negative genetic interaction with a las17Delta strain. We conclude that Asp1p/Vip1p is important for the function of the cortical actin cytoskeleton.
The Arp2/3 complex is an essential component of the yeast actin cytoskeleton that localizes to cortical actin patches. We have isolated and characterized a temperature-sensitive mutant of Schizosaccharomyces pombe arp2 that displays a defect in cortical actin patch distribution. The arp2(+) gene encodes an essential actin-related protein that colocalizes with actin at the cortical actin patch. Sucrose gradient analysis of the Arp2/3 complex in the arp2-1 mutant indicated that the Arp2p and Arc18p subunits are specifically lost from the complex at restrictive temperature. These results are consistent with immunolocalization studies of the mutant that show that Arp2-1p is diffusely localized in the cytoplasm at restrictive temperature. Interestingly, Arp3p remains localized to the cortical actin patch under the same restrictive conditions, leading to the hypothesis that loss of Arp2p from the actin patch affects patch motility but does not severely compromise its architecture. Analysis of the mutant Arp2 protein demonstrated defects in ATP and Arp3p binding, suggesting a possible model for disruption of the complex.
Profilins bind to monomeric actin and also interact with ligands such as phosphoinositide 4,5-bisphosphate, the proline-rich protein VASP and a complex of four to six polypeptides identified in Acanthamoeba that includes two actin-related proteins. Here, we report the identification and characterization of an essential gene from Schizosaccharomyces pombe, sop2+, a mutation in which rescues the temperature-sensitive lethality of a profilin mutation, cdc3-124. The sop2-1 mutant is defective for cell elongation and septation, suggesting that it is involved in multiple cortical actin-requiring processes. Consistent with a role in actin cytoskeletal function, negative interactions have been identified between sop2-1 and act1-48, a mutant allele of actin. Sop2p is a novel 377 amino acid polypeptide with similarity to proteins of the beta-transducin repeat family. Sop2p-related proteins have been identified by sequencing projects in diverse species, and we have isolated a human cDNA highly related to sop2+, SOP2 Hs, which functionally complements the sop2-1 mutation. Sop2p proteins from all species contain peptide sequences identical or highly similar to two peptide sequences from an Acanthamoeba beta-transducin repeat protein present in the profilin binding complex. Biochemical analyses demonstrate that Sop2p is present in a complex which also contains the actin-related protein, Arp3p. Immunofluorescence studies reveal the presence of Sop2p in (i) punctate structures distributed throughout the cell, (ii) cables that extend the length of the cell, and (iii) a medial band in a small percentage of septating cells. Collectively these data demonstrate the interaction of Sop2p with Arp3p, profilin and actin.
The gene encoding the actin-related protein Arp3 was first identified in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe and is a member of an evolutionarily conserved family of actin-related proteins. Here we present several key findings that define an essential role for Arp3p in the functioning of the cortical actin cytoskeleton. First, mutants in arp3 interact specifically with profilin and actin mutants. Second, Arp3 localizes to cortical actin patches which are required for polarized cell growth. Third, the arp3 gene is required for the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton during the cell cycle. Finally, the Arp3 protein is present in a large protein complex. We believe that this complex may mediate the cortical functions of profilin at actin patches in S. pombe.