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      A rapid, membrane-dependent pathway directs furrow formation through RalA in the early Drosophila embryo.

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          Abstract

          Plasma membrane furrow formation is crucial in cell division and cytokinesis. Furrow formation in early syncytial Drosophila embryos is exceptionally rapid, with furrows forming in as little as 3.75 min. Here, we use 4D imaging to identify furrow formation, stabilization, and regression periods, and identify a rapid, membrane-dependent pathway that is essential for plasma membrane furrow formation in vivo. Myosin II function is thought to provide the ingression force for cytokinetic furrows, but the role of membrane trafficking pathways in guiding furrow formation is less clear. We demonstrate that a membrane trafficking pathway centered on Ras-like protein A (RalA) is required for fast furrow ingression in the early fly embryo. RalA function is absolutely required for furrow formation and initiation. In the absence of RalA and furrow function, chromosomal segregation is aberrant and polyploid nuclei are observed. RalA localizes to syncytial furrows, and mediates the movement of exocytic vesicles to the plasma membrane. Sec5, which is an exocyst complex subunit and localizes to ingressing furrows in wild-type embryos, becomes punctate and loses its cortical association in the absence of RalA function. Rab8 also fails to traffic to the plasma membrane and accumulates aberrantly in the cytoplasm in RalA disrupted embryos. RalA localization precedes F-actin recruitment to the furrow tip, suggesting that membrane trafficking might function upstream of cytoskeletal remodeling. These studies identify a pathway, which stretches from Rab8 to RalA and the exocyst complex, that mediates rapid furrow formation in early Drosophila embryos.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Development
          Development (Cambridge, England)
          The Company of Biologists
          1477-9129
          0950-1991
          Jul 01 2015
          : 142
          : 13
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80208, USA.
          [2 ] Department of Biological Sciences, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80208, USA todd.blankenship@du.edu.
          Article
          dev.120998
          10.1242/dev.120998
          4510590
          26092850
          a353ca4f-43b1-4cc4-9454-ae8f227f26a0
          History

          Exocytosis,Rab8,RalA,Syncytial divisions
          Exocytosis, Rab8, RalA, Syncytial divisions

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