Shape–motion relationships of centering microtubule asters

Author:

Tanimoto Hirokazu1,Kimura Akatsuki234,Minc Nicolas1

Affiliation:

1. Institut Jacques Monod, 75205 Paris, France

2. Department of Genetics, The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI), Mishima 411-8540, Japan

3. National Institute of Genetics, Mishima 411-8540, Japan

4. Institut Curie, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique UMR 144, 75248 Paris, France

Abstract

Although mechanisms that contribute to microtubule (MT) aster positioning have been extensively studied, still little is known on how asters move inside cells to faithfully target a cellular location. Here, we study sperm aster centration in sea urchin eggs, as a stereotypical large-scale aster movement with extreme constraints on centering speed and precision. By tracking three-dimensional aster centration dynamics in eggs with manipulated shapes, we show that aster geometry resulting from MT growth and interaction with cell boundaries dictates aster instantaneous directionality, yielding cell shape–dependent centering trajectories. Aster laser surgery and modeling suggest that dynein-dependent MT cytoplasmic pulling forces that scale to MT length function to convert aster geometry into directionality. In contrast, aster speed remains largely independent of aster size, shape, or absolute dynein activity, which suggests it may be predominantly determined by aster growth rate rather than MT force amplitude. These studies begin to define the geometrical principles that control aster movements.

Funder

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

Fondation pour la Recherche Médical

European Research Council

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

Reference33 articles.

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2. The movement of the egg nucleus in relation to the sperm aster in the echinoderm egg;Chambers;J. Exp. Biol.,1939

3. Manipulating cell shape by placing cells into micro-fabricated chambers;Chang;Methods Mol. Biol.,2014

4. Stable and dynamic microtubules coordinately shape the myosin activation zone during cytokinetic furrow formation;Foe;J. Cell Biol.,2008

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