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Dive into the research topics where Michael A. McMurray is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael A. McMurray.


Cell | 2009

Mitochondrial Dysfunction Leads to Nuclear Genome Instability via an Iron-Sulfur Cluster Defect

Joshua R. Veatch; Michael A. McMurray; Zara W. Nelson; Daniel E. Gottschling

Mutations and deletions in the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA), as well as instability of the nuclear genome, are involved in multiple human diseases. Here, we report that in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, loss of mtDNA leads to nuclear genome instability, through a process of cell-cycle arrest and selection we define as a cellular crisis. This crisis is not mediated by the absence of respiration, but instead correlates with a reduction in the mitochondrial membrane potential. Analysis of cells undergoing this crisis identified a defect in iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) biogenesis, which requires normal mitochondrial function. We found that downregulation of nonmitochondrial ISC protein biogenesis was sufficient to cause increased genomic instability in cells with intact mitochondrial function. These results suggest mitochondrial dysfunction stimulates nuclear genome instability by inhibiting the production of ISC-containing protein(s), which are required for maintenance of nuclear genome integrity. For a video summary of this article, see the PaperFlick file available with the online Supplemental Data.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Saccharomyces cerevisiae septins: Supramolecular organization of heterooligomers and the mechanism of filament assembly

Aurélie Bertin; Michael A. McMurray; Patricia Grob; Sang-Shin Park; Galo Garcia; Insiyyah Patanwala; Ho-Leung Ng; Tom Alber; Jeremy Thorner; Eva Nogales

Mitotic yeast cells express five septins (Cdc3, Cdc10, Cdc11, Cdc12, and Shs1/Sep7). Only Shs1 is nonessential. The four essential septins form a complex containing two copies of each, but their arrangement was not known. Single-particle analysis by EM confirmed that the heterooligomer is octameric and revealed that the subunits are arrayed in a linear rod. Identity of each subunit was determined by examining complexes lacking a given septin, by antibody decoration, and by fusion to marker proteins (GFP or maltose binding protein). The rod has the order Cdc11–Cdc12–Cdc3–Cdc10–Cdc10–Cdc3–Cdc12–Cdc11 and, hence, lacks polarity. At low ionic strength, rods assemble end-to-end to form filaments but not when Cdc11 is absent or its N terminus is altered. Filaments invariably pair into long parallel “railroad tracks.” Lateral association seems to be mediated by heterotetrameric coiled coils between the paired C-terminal extensions of Cdc3 and Cdc12 projecting orthogonally from each filament. Shs1 may be able to replace Cdc11 at the end of the rod. Our findings provide insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying the function and regulation of cellular septin structures.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

PHOSPHATIDYLINOSITOL-4,5-BISPHOSPHATE PROMOTES BUDDING YEAST SEPTIN FILAMENT ASSEMBLY AND ORGANIZATION

Aurélie Bertin; Michael A. McMurray; Luong Thai; Galo Garcia; Violet Votin; Patricia Grob; Theresa Allyn; Jeremy Thorner; Eva Nogales

Septins are a conserved family of GTP-binding proteins that assemble into symmetric linear heterooligomeric complexes, which in turn are able to polymerize into apolar filaments and higher-order structures. In budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and other eukaryotes, proper septin organization is essential for processes that involve membrane remodeling, such as the execution of cytokinesis. In yeast, four septin subunits form a Cdc11-Cdc12-Cdc3-Cdc10-Cdc10-Cdc3-Cdc12-Cdc11 heterooctameric rod that polymerizes into filaments thought to form a collar around the bud neck in close contact with the inner surface of the plasma membrane. To explore septin-membrane interactions, we examined the effect of lipid monolayers on septin organization at the ultrastructural level using electron microscopy. Using this methodology, we have acquired new insights into the potential effect of septin-membrane interactions on filament assembly and, more specifically, on the role of phosphoinositides. Our studies demonstrate that budding yeast septins interact specifically with phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) and indicate that the N terminus of Cdc10 makes a major contribution to the interaction of septin filaments with PIP2. Furthermore, we found that the presence of PIP2 promotes filament polymerization and organization on monolayers, even under conditions that prevent filament formation in solution or for mutants that prevent filament formation in solution. In the extreme case of septin complexes lacking the normally terminal subunit Cdc11 or the normally central Cdc10 doublet, the combination of the PIP2-containing monolayer and nucleotide permitted filament formation in vitro via atypical Cdc12-Cdc12 and Cdc3-Cdc3 interactions, respectively.


Cell Division | 2009

Septins: molecular partitioning and the generation of cellular asymmetry

Michael A. McMurray; Jeremy Thorner

During division, certain cellular contents can be distributed unequally; daughter cells with different fates have different needs. Septins are proteins that participate in the establishment and maintenance of asymmetry during cell morphogenesis, thereby contributing to the unequal partitioning of cellular contents during division. The septins themselves provide a paradigm for studying how elaborate multi-component structures are assembled, dynamically modified, and segregated through each cell division cycle and during development. Here we review our current understanding of the supramolecular organization of septins, the function of septins in cellular compartmentalization, and the mechanisms that control assembly, dynamics, and inheritance of higher-order septin structures, with particular emphasis on recent findings made in budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae).


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

Subunit-dependent modulation of septin assembly: Budding yeast septin Shs1 promotes ring and gauze formation

Galo Garcia; Aurélie Bertin; Zhu Li; Yi Song; Michael A. McMurray; Jeremy Thorner; Eva Nogales

Substitution of specific terminal subunits within septin complexes and septin phosphorylation drive the formation of distinct higher-order septin assemblies in budding yeast.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Pheromone-induced anisotropy in yeast plasma membrane phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate distribution is required for MAPK signaling

Lindsay S. Garrenton; Christopher J. Stefan; Michael A. McMurray; Scott D. Emr; Jeremy Thorner

During response of budding yeast to peptide mating pheromone, the cell becomes markedly polarized and MAPK scaffold protein Ste5 localizes to the resulting projection (shmoo tip). We demonstrated before that this recruitment is essential for sustained MAPK signaling and requires interaction of a pleckstrin homology (PH) domain in Ste5 with phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P2] in the plasma membrane. Using fluorescently tagged high-affinity probes specific for PtdIns(4,5)P2, we have now found that this phosphoinositide is highly concentrated at the shmoo tip in cells responding to pheromone. Maintenance of this strikingly anisotropic distribution of PtdIns(4,5)P2, stable tethering of Ste5 at the shmoo tip, downstream MAPK activation, and expression of a mating pathway-specific reporter gene all require continuous function of the plasma membrane-associated PtdIns 4-kinase Stt4 and the plasma membrane-associated PtdIns4P 5-kinase Mss4 (but not the Golgi-associated PtdIns 4-kinase Pik1). Our observations demonstrate that PtdIns(4,5)P2 is the primary determinant for restricting localization of Ste5 within the plasma membrane and provide direct evidence that an extracellular stimulus-evoked self-reinforcing mechanism generates a spatially enriched pool of PtdIns(4,5)P2 necessary for the membrane anchoring and function of a signaling complex.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012

Three-dimensional ultrastructure of the septin filament network in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Aurélie Bertin; Michael A. McMurray; Jason Pierson; Luong Thai; Kent L. McDonald; Elena A. Zehr; Galo Garcia; Peter J. Peters; Jeremy Thorner; Eva Nogales

Septins are essential for membrane compartmentalization and remodeling. Electron tomography of yeast bud necks shows filaments perpendicular and parallel to the mother-bud axis that resemble in vitro septin arrays. Filaments are still present, although disordered, in mutants lacking a single septin, underscoring the importance of septin assembly.


Cell Cycle | 2009

Reuse, replace, recycle. Specificity in subunit inheritance and assembly of higher-order septin structures during mitotic and meiotic division in budding yeast.

Michael A. McMurray; Jeremy Thorner

Septins are guanine nucleotide-binding proteins that form hetero-oligomeric complexes, which assemble into filaments and higher-order structures at sites of cell division and morphogenesis in eukaryotes. Dynamic changes in the organization of septin-containing structures occur concomitantly with progression through the mitotic cell cycle and during cell differentiation. Septins also undergo stage-specific post-translational modifications, which have been implicated in regulating their dynamics, in some cases via purported effects on septin turnover. In our recent study, the fate of two of the five septins expressed in mitotic cells of budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) was tracked using two complementary fluorescence-based methods for pulse-chase analysis. During mitotic growth, previously-made molecules of both septins (Cdc10 and Cdc12) persisted through multiple successive divisions and were incorporated equivalently with newly synthesized molecules into hetero-oligomers and higher-order structures. Similarly, in cells undergoing meiosis and the developmental program of sporulation, pre-existing copies of Cdc10 were incorporated into new structures. In marked contrast, Cdc12 was irreversibly excluded from septin complexes and replaced by another septin, Spr3. Here, we discuss the broader implications of these results and related findings with regard to how septin dynamics is coordinated with the mitotic cell cycle and in the yeast life cycle, and how these observations may relate to control of the dynamics of other complex multi-subunit assemblies.


Biological Chemistry | 2011

Genetic interactions with mutations affecting septin assembly reveal ESCRT functions in budding yeast cytokinesis.

Michael A. McMurray; Christopher J. Stefan; Megan Wemmer; Greg Odorizzi; Scott D. Emr; Jeremy Thorner

Abstract Membrane trafficking via targeted exocytosis to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae bud neck provides new membrane and membrane-associated factors that are critical for cytokinesis. It remains unknown whether yeast plasma membrane abscission, the final step of cytokinesis, occurs spontaneously following extensive vesicle fusion, as in plant cells, or requires dedicated membrane fission machinery, as in cultured mammalian cells. Components of the endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) pathway, or close relatives thereof, appear to participate in cytokinetic abscission in various cell types, but roles in cell division had not been documented in budding yeast, where ESCRTs were first characterized. By contrast, the septin family of filament-forming cytoskeletal proteins were first identified by their requirement for yeast cell division. We show here that mutations in ESCRT-encoding genes exacerbate the cytokinesis defects of cla4Δ or elm1Δ mutants, in which septin assembly is perturbed at an early stage in cell division, and alleviate phenotypes of cells carrying temperature-sensitive alleles of a septin-encoding gene, CDC10. Elevated chitin synthase II (Chs2) levels coupled with aberrant morphogenesis and chitin deposition in elm1Δ cells carrying ESCRT mutations suggest that ESCRTs normally enhance the efficiency of cell division by promoting timely endocytic turnover of key cytokinetic enzymes.


Genetics | 2014

Higher-Order Septin Assembly Is Driven by GTP-Promoted Conformational Changes: Evidence from Unbiased Mutational Analysis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Andrew D. Weems; Courtney R. Johnson; Juan Lucas Argueso; Michael A. McMurray

Septin proteins bind GTP and heterooligomerize into filaments with conserved functions across a wide range of eukaryotes. Most septins hydrolyze GTP, altering the oligomerization interfaces; yet mutations designed to abolish nucleotide binding or hydrolysis by yeast septins perturb function only at high temperatures. Here, we apply an unbiased mutational approach to this problem. Mutations causing defects at high temperature mapped exclusively to the oligomerization interface encompassing the GTP-binding pocket, or to the pocket itself. Strikingly, cold-sensitive defects arise when certain of these same mutations are coexpressed with a wild-type allele, suggestive of a novel mode of dominance involving incompatibility between mutant and wild-type molecules at the septin–septin interfaces that mediate filament polymerization. A different cold-sensitive mutant harbors a substitution in an unstudied but highly conserved region of the septin Cdc12. A homologous domain in the small GTPase Ran allosterically regulates GTP-binding domain conformations, pointing to a possible new functional domain in some septins. Finally, we identify a mutation in septin Cdc3 that restores the high-temperature assembly competence of a mutant allele of septin Cdc10, likely by adopting a conformation more compatible with nucleotide-free Cdc10. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that GTP binding and hydrolysis promote, but are not required for, one-time events—presumably oligomerization-associated conformational changes—during assembly of the building blocks of septin filaments. Restrictive temperatures impose conformational constraints on mutant septin proteins, preventing new assembly and in certain cases destabilizing existing assemblies. These insights from yeast relate directly to disease-causing mutations in human septins.

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Jeremy Thorner

University of California

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Eva Nogales

University of California

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Galo Garcia

University of California

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Luong Thai

University of California

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Daniel E. Gottschling

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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