The Exocyst: Dynamic Machine or Static Tethering Complex?
Hisayo Nishida-FukudaPublished in: BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology (2019)
The exocyst is a conserved octameric complex that physically tethers a vesicle to the plasma membrane, prior to membrane fusion. It is important not only for secretion and membrane delivery but also, in mammalian cells, for cytokinesis, ciliogenesis, autophagy, tumorigenesis, and host defense. The combination of genome editing and advanced light microscopy of exocyst subunits in living cells has recently shown the complex to be much more dynamic than previously appreciated, and exposed how little we still know about its function and regulation.