The recycling endosome protein Rab25 coordinates collective cell movements in the zebrafish surface epithelium

Elife. 2021 Mar 23:10:e66060. doi: 10.7554/eLife.66060.

Abstract

In emerging epithelial tissues, cells undergo dramatic rearrangements to promote tissue shape changes. Dividing cells remain interconnected via transient cytokinetic bridges. Bridges are cleaved during abscission and currently, the consequences of disrupting abscission in developing epithelia are not well understood. We show that the Rab GTPase Rab25 localizes near cytokinetic midbodies and likely coordinates abscission through endomembrane trafficking in the epithelium of the zebrafish gastrula during epiboly. In maternal-zygotic Rab25a and Rab25b mutant embryos, morphogenic activity tears open persistent apical cytokinetic bridges that failed to undergo timely abscission. Cytokinesis defects result in anisotropic cell morphologies that are associated with a reduction of contractile actomyosin networks. This slows cell rearrangements and alters the viscoelastic responses of the tissue, all of which likely contribute to delayed epiboly. We present a model in which Rab25 trafficking coordinates cytokinetic bridge abscission and cortical actin density, impacting local cell shape changes and tissue-scale forces.

Keywords: Rabs; abscission; cell biology; cytokinesis; developmental biology; epiboly; epithelial morphogenesis; trafficking; zebrafish.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cell Movement / genetics*
  • Cytokinesis
  • Embryo, Nonmammalian / physiology
  • Epithelium / physiology
  • Gastrula / physiology
  • Zebrafish / genetics
  • Zebrafish / physiology*
  • Zebrafish Proteins
  • rab GTP-Binding Proteins / genetics*
  • rab GTP-Binding Proteins / metabolism

Substances

  • Zebrafish Proteins
  • rab GTP-Binding Proteins