Affiliation:
1. Division of Biology, IISER Pune, Dr. Homi Bhabha Road, Pashan, Pune 411008, India
2. LBDV, Sorbonne Universite/CNRS, 06230 Villefranche-sur-Mer, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Radial microtubule (MT) arrays or asters determine cell geometry in animal cells. Multiple asters interacting with motors, such as those in syncytia, form intracellular patterns, but the mechanical principles behind this are not clear. Here, we report that oocytes of the marine ascidian Phallusia mammillata treated with the drug BI-D1870 spontaneously form cytoplasmic MT asters, or cytasters. These asters form steady state segregation patterns in a shell just under the membrane. Cytaster centers tessellate the oocyte cytoplasm, that is divide it into polygonal structures, dominated by hexagons, in a kinesin-5-dependent manner, while inter-aster MTs form ‘mini-spindles’. A computational model of multiple asters interacting with kinesin-5 can reproduce both tessellation patterns and mini-spindles in a manner specific to the number of MTs per aster, MT lengths and kinesin-5 density. Simulations predict that the hexagonal tessellation patterns scale with increasing cell size, when the packing fraction of asters in cells is ∼1.6. This self-organized in vivo tessellation by cytasters is comparable to the ‘circle packing problem’, suggesting that there is an intrinsic mechanical pattern-forming module that is potentially relevant to understanding the role of collective mechanics of cytoskeletal elements in embryogenesis.
This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper.
Funder
Department of Biotechnology, Ministry of Science and Technology, India
Indo-French Centre for the Promotion of Advanced Research
Council for Scientific and Industrial Research
Publisher
The Company of Biologists
Cited by
9 articles.
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