ABSTRACT
Organelle division is executed through contraction of a ring-shaped supramolecular dividing machinery. A core component of the machinery is the dynamin-based ring conserved during the division of mitochondrion, plastid and peroxisome. Here, using isolated peroxisome-dividing (POD) machinery from a unicellular red algae, Cyanidioschyzon merolae, we identified a dynamin-based ring organizing center (DOC) that acts as an initiation point for formation of the dynamin-based ring. C. merolae contains a single peroxisome, the division of which can be highly synchronized by light–dark stimulation; thus, intact POD machinery can be isolated in bulk. Dynamin-based ring homeostasis is maintained by the turnover of the GTP-bound form of the dynamin-related protein Dnm1 between the cytosol and division machinery via the DOC. A single DOC is formed on the POD machinery with a diameter of 500–700 nm, and the dynamin-based ring is unidirectionally elongated from the DOC in a manner that is dependent on GTP concentration. During the later step of membrane fission, the second DOC is formed and constructs the double dynamin-based ring to make the machinery thicker. These findings provide new insights to define fundamental mechanisms underlying the dynamin-based membrane fission in eukaryotic cells.
Footnotes
Author contributions
Y.I., K.O., M.H. and Y.F. designed the research; Y.I. and Y.A. performed the research; Y.I., Y.A., K.O., M.H., H.K., T.K. and Y.F. contributed new reagents/analytical tools; Y.I., Y.A., K.O., M.H., H.K., T.K. and Y.F. analyzed the data; and Y.I., H.K., T.K. and Y.F. wrote the paper.
Funding
This work was supported in part by grants from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (14J04556 to Y.I.); a Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)-supported program for the strategic research foundation at private universities (JWU2014-1018 to T.K.); Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (CREST) program of the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) (to T.K.); MEXT of Japan – Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (16H04813 to T.K.; 24247038, 25112518, 25116717, 26116007, 15K14511 and 15K21743 to Y.F.); grants from the Takeda Science Foundation (to Y.F.); and the Japan Foundation for Applied Enzymology (to Y.F.).