Project Summary
Sensing and processing information through signaling cascades is an essential part of cellular life. A few
signaling cascades such as the MAP kinase and Hippo pathways are ubiquitous among eukaryotes yet
perform different functions across organisms. Although these pathways are well-studied, how they evolve to
take on new functions and adapt to new inputs remains poorly understood. The Mitotic Exit Network (MEN), a
Ras-like GTPase signaling cascade and yeast homolog of the Hippo pathway, provides a unique opportunity to
study this question. In the MEN, the same core signaling components operate in distinct manners under
different developmental trajectories. During yeast mitosis which occurs through an asymmetric cell division
called budding, the MEN is scaffolded onto the spindle pole bodies (SPB, the yeast equivalent of centrosomes)
and responds to spindle position through its GTPase Tem1. During meiosis, where budding is suppressed and
thus no need to sense spindle position, MEN signaling is no longer organized at the SPBs, and it is unclear
whether Tem1 is still required for MEN activation and what signal it may respond to. To understand the
adaptation of the MEN under distinct cellular contexts, this proposal will test the hypothesis that this adaptation
is enabled partially by different activation mechanisms of the MEN kinase Cdc15, the effector kinase of Tem1,
between mitosis and meiosis (Aim 1). In contrast to the drastic change in spatial organization of the MEN core
components between mitosis and meiosis, the effector protein of the MEN, the phosphatase Cdc14, remains
sequestered in the nucleolus prior to activation both in mitosis and meiosis. In fact, this nucleolar localization of
Cdc14 is conserved from yeast to human. Sequestration of Cdc14 in the nucleolus could function either 1) to
ensure tight inhibition of Cdc14’s phosphatase activity prior to activation or 2) to localize Cdc14 to
dephosphorylate specific substrates in the nucleolus. To uncover the selection pressure that maintains this
conserved nucleolar localization of Cdc14, this proposal will examine these two hypotheses by sequestering
Cdc14 elsewhere in the cell and characterize the consequences first in yeast and then in mammalian cells
(Aim 2). The experiments within both aims will be initiated during the K99 phase which also includes training of
the candidate on new experimental systems such as yeast meiosis and mammalian cells, as well as the
development and implementation of quantitative microscopy, proximity labeling and optogenetics. Furthermore,
the candidate has assembled an outstanding mentor team to both advise her scientifically to facilitate progress
of the project and prepare her for the transition to an independent investigator. Together, this proposal will
create a strong foundation for an independent research career in understanding the evolution/adaptation and
spatial organization of cellular signaling.