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Dive into the research topics where Luther W. Pollard is active.

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Featured researches published by Luther W. Pollard.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2010

Tropomyosin and Myosin-II Cellular Levels Promote Actomyosin Ring Assembly in Fission Yeast

Benjamin C. Stark; Thomas E. Sladewski; Luther W. Pollard; Matthew Lord

A combination of in vivo and in vitro approaches were used to show how tropomyosin and myosin-II contribute to contractile ring assembly in fission yeast. Ring assembly is sensitive to changes in the cellular levels of myosin-II, and tropomyosin works to maximize myosin-II motor function during this process by stabilizing actomyosin interactions.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2014

Fission yeast tropomyosin specifies directed transport of myosin-V along actin cables

Joseph E. Clayton; Luther W. Pollard; Maria Sckolnick; Carol S. Bookwalter; Alex R. Hodges; Kathleen M. Trybus; Matthew Lord

Fission yeast tropomyosin targets myosin-V to actin cables by favoring processivity of the motor. Live-cell imaging is used to estimate the number of myosin-V molecules per motile particle in vivo. In vitro reconstitution demonstrates the physiological relevance of tropomyosin-based targeting of this motor.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012

Fission yeast Cyk3p is a transglutaminase-like protein that participates in cytokinesis and cell morphogenesis

Luther W. Pollard; Masayuki Onishi; John R. Pringle; Matthew Lord

We have identified a fission yeast morphogenesis factor (Cyk3p) that functions with myosin II and chitin synthase during cytokinesis. Cyk3p possesses a novel transglutaminase domain that lacks an active site yet is essential for function. Our work demonstrates the physiological importance of such domains, which are found throughout eukaryotes.


Nature Communications | 2017

Mechanoregulated inhibition of formin facilitates contractile actomyosin ring assembly

Dennis Zimmermann; Kaitlin E. Homa; Glen M. Hocky; Luther W. Pollard; Enrique M. De La Cruz; Gregory A. Voth; Kathleen M. Trybus; David R. Kovar

Cytokinesis physically separates dividing cells by forming a contractile actomyosin ring. The fission yeast contractile ring has been proposed to assemble by Search-Capture-Pull-Release from cytokinesis precursor nodes that include the molecular motor type-II myosin Myo2 and the actin assembly factor formin Cdc12. By successfully reconstituting Search-Capture-Pull in vitro, we discovered that formin Cdc12 is a mechanosensor, whereby myosin pulling on formin-bound actin filaments inhibits Cdc12-mediated actin assembly. We mapped Cdc12 mechanoregulation to its formin homology 1 domain, which facilitates delivery of new actin subunits to the elongating actin filament. Quantitative modeling suggests that the pulling force of the myosin propagates through the actin filament, which behaves as an entropic spring, and thereby may stretch the disordered formin homology 1 domain and impede formin-mediated actin filament elongation. Finally, live cell imaging of mechano-insensitive formin mutant cells established that mechanoregulation of formin Cdc12 is required for efficient contractile ring assembly in vivo.The fission yeast cytokinetic ring assembles by Search-Capture-Pull-Release from precursor nodes that include formin Cdc12 and myosin Myo2. The authors reconstitute Search-Capture-Pull in vitro and find that Myo2 pulling on Cdc12-associated actin filaments mechano-inhibits Cdc12-mediated assembly, which enables proper ring assembly in vivo.


Cytoskeleton | 2015

Myosin motor isoforms direct specification of actomyosin function by tropomyosins.

Joseph E. Clayton; Luther W. Pollard; George G. Murray; Matthew Lord

Myosins and tropomyosins represent two cytoskeletal proteins that often work together with actin filaments in contractile and motile cellular processes. While the specialized role of tropomyosin in striated muscle myosin‐II regulation is well characterized, its role in nonmuscle myosin regulation is poorly understood. We previously showed that fission yeast tropomyosin (Cdc8p) positively regulates myosin‐II (Myo2p) and myosin‐V (Myo52p) motors. To understand the broader implications of this regulation we examined the role of two mammalian tropomyosins (Tpm3.1cy/Tm5NM1 and Tpm4.2cy/Tm4) recently implicated in cancer cell proliferation and metastasis. Like Cdc8p, the Tpm3.1cy and Tpm4.2cy isoforms significantly enhance Myo2p and Myo52p motor activity, converting nonprocessive Myo52p molecules into processive motors that can walk along actin tracks as single molecules. In contrast to the positive regulation of Myo2p and Myo52p, Cdc8p and the mammalian tropomyosins potently inhibited skeletal muscle myosin‐II, while having negligible effects on the highly processive mammalian myosin‐Va. In support of a conserved role for certain tropomyosins in regulating nonmuscle actomyosin structures, Tpm3.1cy supported normal contractile ring function in fission yeast. Our work reveals that actomyosin regulation by tropomyosin is dependent on the myosin isoform, highlighting a general role for specific isoforms of tropomyosin in sorting myosin motor outputs.


PLOS ONE | 2013

UCS Protein Rng3p Is Essential for Myosin-II Motor Activity during Cytokinesis in Fission Yeast

Benjamin C. Stark; Michael L. James; Luther W. Pollard; Vladimir Sirotkin; Matthew Lord

UCS proteins have been proposed to operate as co-chaperones that work with Hsp90 in the de novo folding of myosin motors. The fission yeast UCS protein Rng3p is essential for actomyosin ring assembly and cytokinesis. Here we investigated the role of Rng3p in fission yeast myosin-II (Myo2p) motor activity. Myo2p isolated from an arrested rng3-65 mutant was capable of binding actin, yet lacked stability and activity based on its expression levels and inactivity in ATPase and actin filament gliding assays. Myo2p isolated from a myo2-E1 mutant (a mutant hyper-sensitive to perturbation of Rng3p function) showed similar behavior in the same assays and exhibited an altered motor conformation based on limited proteolysis experiments. We propose that Rng3p is not required for the folding of motors per se, but instead works to ensure the activity of intrinsically unstable myosin-II motors. Rng3p is specific to conventional myosin-II and the actomyosin ring, and is not required for unconventional myosin motor function at other actin structures. However, artificial destabilization of myosin-I motors at endocytic actin patches (using a myo1-E1 mutant) led to recruitment of Rng3p to patches. Thus, while Rng3p is specific to myosin-II, UCS proteins are adaptable and can respond to changes in the stability of other myosin motors.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Fission yeast myosin Myo2 is down-regulated in actin affinity by light chain phosphorylation

Luther W. Pollard; Carol S. Bookwalter; Qing Tang; Elena B. Krementsova; Kathleen M. Trybus; Susan Lowey

Significance The separation of daughter cells during cell division, or cytokinesis, is a process that requires contractile rings which develop tension using actin and myosin. Current models of contractile ring dynamics are based on quantitative data from two decades of research using the tractable fission yeast system. However, it is unknown how fission yeast’s essential myosin, Myo2, is regulated in the contractile ring. Here, we find that Myo2 does not assemble into minifilaments, consistent with its role in ring precursor nodes. Unphosphorylated Myo2 exhibits robust enzymatic and motor activity whereas phosphorylation of Myo2’s regulatory light chain reduces its affinity for actin. This reduction likely weakens the tension in the contractile ring, potentially to delay cytokinesis until segregation of chromosomes is complete. Studies in fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe have provided the basis for the most advanced models of the dynamics of the cytokinetic contractile ring. Myo2, a class-II myosin, is the major source of tension in the contractile ring, but how Myo2 is anchored and regulated to produce force is poorly understood. To enable more detailed biochemical/biophysical studies, Myo2 was expressed in the baculovirus/Sf9 insect cell system with its two native light chains, Rlc1 and Cdc4. Milligram yields of soluble, unphosphorylated Myo2 were obtained that exhibited high actin-activated ATPase activity and in vitro actin filament motility. The fission yeast specific chaperone Rng3 was thus not required for expression or activity. In contrast to nonmuscle myosins from animal cells that require phosphorylation of the regulatory light chain for activation, phosphorylation of Rlc1 markedly reduced the affinity of Myo2 for actin. Another unusual feature of Myo2 was that, unlike class-II myosins, which generally form bipolar filamentous structures, Myo2 showed no inclination to self-assemble at approximately physiological salt concentrations, as analyzed by sedimentation velocity ultracentrifugation. This lack of assembly supports the hypothesis that clusters of Myo2 depend on interactions at the cell cortex in structural units called nodes for force production during cytokinesis.


BioArchitecture | 2014

Getting myosin-V on the right track: Tropomyosin sorts transport in yeast

Luther W. Pollard; Matthew Lord

Recent studies have revealed a novel mechanism of myosin regulation in which the actin-binding protein tropomyosin converts atypical type-V myosins into processive cargo transporters. To achieve this, tropomyosins primary role appears to lie in its ability to influence myosins enzyme kinetics, prolonging the strong actin-bound ADP/apo state to enable hand-over-hand walking of myosin-V dimers along actin tracks. Activation of myosin-V mediated transport by tropomyosin underscores its function in helping to direct cargos to specific actin tracks and subcellular destinations. This type of regulation supports the broader notion that tropomyosin plays a key role in actomyosin sorting.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2016

Measurements of Myosin-II Motor Activity During Cytokinesis in Fission Yeast

Qing Tang; Luther W. Pollard; Matthew Lord

Fission yeast myosin-II (Myo2p) represents the critical actin-based motor protein that drives actomyosin ring assembly and constriction during cytokinesis. We detail three different methods to measure Myo2p motor function. Actin-activated ATPases provide a readout of actomyosin ATPase motor activity in a bulk assay; actin filament motility assays reveal the speed and efficiency of myosin-driven actin filament gliding (when motors are anchored); myosin-bead motility assays reveal the speed and efficiency of myosin ensembles traveling along actin filaments (when actin is anchored). Collectively, these methods allow us to combine the standard in vivo approaches common to fission yeast with in vitro biochemical methods to learn more about the mechanistic action of myosin-II during cytokinesis.


Biophysical Journal | 2016

Myosin II Head Interaction in Primitive Species

Kyounghwan Lee; Shixin Yang; Xiong Liu; Edward D. Korn; Floyd Sarsoza; Sanford I. Bernstein; Luther W. Pollard; Matthew J. Lord; Kathleen M. Trybus; Roger Craig

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Benjamin C. Stark

Illinois Institute of Technology

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Qing Tang

University of Vermont

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Edward D. Korn

National Institutes of Health

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