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Dive into the research topics where David Pruyne is active.

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Featured researches published by David Pruyne.


Nature Cell Biology | 2002

Formins direct Arp2/3-independent actin filament assembly to polarize cell growth in yeast

Marie Evangelista; David Pruyne; David C. Amberg; Charles Boone; Aanthony Bretscher

Formins have been implicated in the regulation of cytoskeletal structure in animals and fungi. Here we show that the formins Bni1 and Bnr1 of budding yeast stimulate the assembly of actin filaments that function as precursors to tropomyosin-stabilized cables that direct polarized cell growth. With loss of formin function, cables disassemble, whereas increased formin activity causes the hyperaccumulation of cable-like filaments. Unlike the assembly of cortical actin patches, cable assembly requires profilin but not the Arp2/3 complex. Thus formins control a distinct pathway for assembling actin filaments that organize the overall polarity of the cell.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2003

Formin-dependent actin assembly is regulated by distinct modes of Rho signaling in yeast

Yuqing Dong; David Pruyne; Anthony Bretscher

Formins are actin filament nucleators regulated by Rho-GTPases. In budding yeast, the formins Bni1p and Bnr1p direct the assembly of actin cables, which guide polarized secretion and growth. From the six yeast Rho proteins (Cdc42p and Rho1–5p), we have determined that four participate in the regulation of formin activity. We show that the essential function of Rho3p and Rho4p is to activate the formins Bni1p and Bnr1p, and that activated alleles of either formin are able to bypass the requirement for these Rho proteins. Through a separate signaling pathway, Rho1p is necessary for formin activation at elevated temperatures, acting through protein kinase C (Pkc1p), the major effector for Rho1p signaling to the actin cytoskeleton. Although Pkc1p also activates a MAPK pathway, this pathway does not function in formin activation. Formin-dependent cable assembly does not require Cdc42p, but in the absence of Cdc42p function, cable assembly is not properly organized during initiation of bud growth. These results show that formin function is under the control of three distinct, essential Rho signaling pathways.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

Z-line formins promote contractile lattice growth and maintenance in striated muscles of C. elegans.

Lei Mi-Mi; SarahBeth Votra; Kenneth Kemphues; Anthony Bretscher; David Pruyne

Two actin-assembling formins, CYK-1 and FHOD-1, are important for muscle cell growth and maintenance of the contractile lattice in striated muscle cells.


Development | 2007

A Zn-finger/FH2-domain containing protein, FOZI-1, acts redundantly with CeMyoD to specify striated body wall muscle fates in the Caenorhabditis elegans postembryonic mesoderm.

Nirav M. Amin; Kejin Hu; David Pruyne; Dino Terzic; Anthony Bretscher; Jun Liu

Striated muscle development in vertebrates requires the redundant functions of multiple members of the MyoD family. Invertebrates such as Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans contain only one MyoD homolog in each organism. Earlier observations suggest that factors outside of the MyoD family might function redundantly with MyoD in striated muscle fate specification in these organisms. However, the identity of these factors has remained elusive. Here, we describe the identification and characterization of FOZI-1, a putative transcription factor that functions redundantly with CeMyoD (HLH-1) in striated body wall muscle (BWM) fate specification in the C. elegans postembryonic mesoderm. fozi-1 encodes a novel nuclear-localized protein with motifs characteristic of both transcription factors and actin-binding proteins. We show that FOZI-1 shares the same expression pattern as CeMyoD in the postembryonic mesodermal lineage, the M lineage, and that fozi-1-null mutants exhibit similar M lineage-null defects to those found in animals lacking CeMyoD in the M lineage (e.g. loss of a fraction of M lineage-derived BWMs). Interestingly, fozi-1-null mutants with a reduced level of CeMyoD lack most, if not all, M lineage-derived BWMs. Our results indicate that FOZI-1 and the Hox factor MAB-5 function redundantly with CeMyoD in the specification of the striated BWM fate in the C. elegans postembryonic mesoderm, implicating a remarkable level of complexity for the production of a simple striated musculature in C. elegans.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2008

Tropomyosin Function in Yeast

David Pruyne

Tropomyosins were discovered as regulators of actomyosin contractility in muscle cells, making yeasts and other fungi seem unlikely to harbor such proteins. Fungal cells are encased in a rigid cell wall and do not engage in the same sorts of contractile shape changes of animal cells. However, discovery of actin and myosin in yeast raised the possibility for a role for tropomyosin in regulating their interaction. Through a biochemical search, fungal tropomyosins were identified with strong similarities to their animal counterparts in terms ofprotein structure and physical properties. Two particular fungi, the buddingyeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, have provided powerful genetic systems for studying tropomyosins in nonmetazoans. In these yeasts, tropomyosins associate with subsets ofactin filamentous structures. Mutational studies oftropomyosin genes and biochemical assays of purified proteins point to roles for these proteins as factors that stabilize actin filaments, promote actin-based structures of particular architecture and help maintain distinct biochemical identities among different filament populations. Tropomyosin-enriched filaments are the cytoskeletal structures that promote the major cell shape changes of these organisms: polarized growth and cell division.


Journal of Cytology and Histology | 2015

Loss of Sarcomere-associated Formins Disrupts Z-line Organization, but does not Prevent Thin Filament Assembly in Caenorhabditis elegans Muscle.

Lei Mi-Mi; David Pruyne

Members of the formin family of actin filament nucleation factors have been implicated in sarcomere formation, but precisely how these proteins affect sarcomere structure remains poorly understood. Of six formins in the simple nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, only FHOD-1 and CYK-1 contribute to sarcomere assembly in the worms obliquely striated body-wall muscles. We analyze here the ultrastructure of body-wall muscle sarcomeres in worms with putative null fhod-1 and cyk-1 gene mutations. Contrary to a simple model that formins nucleate actin for thin filament assembly, formin mutant sarcomeres contain thin filaments. Rather, formin mutant sarcomeres are narrower and have deformed thin filament-anchoring Z-line structures. Thus, formins affect multiple aspects of sarcomere structure.


Science | 2002

Role of Formins in Actin Assembly: Nucleation and Barbed-End Association

David Pruyne; Marie Evangelista; Changsong Yang; Erfei Bi; Sally H. Zigmond; Anthony Bretscher; Charles Boone


Journal of Cell Science | 2000

Polarization of cell growth in yeast

David Pruyne; Anthony Bretscher


Journal of Cell Science | 2000

Polarization of cell growth in yeast I. Establishment and maintenance of polarity states

David Pruyne; Anthony Bretscher


Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology | 2004

MECHANISMS OF POLARIZED GROWTH AND ORGANELLE SEGREGATION IN YEAST

David Pruyne; Aster Legesse-Miller; Lina Gao; Yuqing Dong; Anthony Bretscher

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Erfei Bi

University of Pennsylvania

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Lei Mi-Mi

State University of New York Upstate Medical University

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Changsong Yang

University of Pennsylvania

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