Allocation of resources among multiple daughter cells
Author(s)
Wirshing, Alison CE; Alonso-Matilla, Roberto; Yan, Michelle; Khalid, Samra; Colarusso, Analeigha V; Odde, David; Lew, Daniel J; ... Show more Show less
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Cell division commonly produces two daughter cells, but there are many exceptions where large cells produce multiple daughters. Multiple fission of some green algae and bacteria; cellularization during embryogenesis of plants and insects; and growth of Ichthyosporeans, Chytrids, and Apicomplexans all provide variations on this theme. In some yeast species, a large multinucleate mother cell grows multiple buds (daughters) simultaneously. Here, we address how mothers partition growth equally among their buds in the multi-budding yeast Aureobasidium pullulans. Bud growth is directed by actin cable networks that appear to be optimized for even partitioning despite complex cell geometries. Even partitioning does not rely on compensatory mechanisms to adjust bud volumes but rather stems directly from effective equalization of polarity sites. These results reveal how conserved cell polarity and cytoskeletal networks are adapted to build complex morphologies in fungi.
Date issued
2025-11-03Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of BiologyJournal
Journal of Cell Biology
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Citation
Alison C.E. Wirshing, Roberto Alonso-Matilla, Michelle Yan, Samra Khalid, Analeigha V. Colarusso, David Odde, Daniel J. Lew; Allocation of resources among multiple daughter cells. J Cell Biol 3 November 2025; 224 (11): e202504177.
Version: Final published version