Increased lateral microtubule contact at the cell cortex is sufficient to drive mammalian spindle elongation

Author:

Guild Joshua1,Ginzberg Miriam B.23,Hueschen Christina L.14,Mitchison Timothy J.2,Dumont Sophie145

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell and Tissue Biology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94131

2. Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115

3. The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON M5G 1X8, Canada

4. Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94131

5. Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143

Abstract

The spindle is a dynamic structure that changes its architecture and size in response to biochemical and physical cues. For example, a simple physical change, cell confinement, can trigger centrosome separation and increase spindle steady-state length at metaphase. How this occurs is not understood, and is the question we pose here. We find that metaphase and anaphase spindles elongate at the same rate when confined, suggesting that similar elongation forces can be generated independent of biochemical and spindle structural differences. Furthermore, this elongation does not require bipolar spindle architecture or dynamic microtubules. Rather, confinement increases numbers of astral microtubules laterally contacting the cortex, shifting contact geometry from “end-on” to “side-on.” Astral microtubules engage cortically anchored motors along their length, as demonstrated by outward sliding and buckling after ablation-mediated release from the centrosome. We show that dynein is required for confinement-induced spindle elongation, and both chemical and physical centrosome removal demonstrate that astral microtubules are required for such spindle elongation and its maintenance. Together the data suggest that promoting lateral cortex–microtubule contacts increases dynein-mediated force generation and is sufficient to drive spindle elongation. More broadly, changes in microtubule-to-cortex contact geometry could offer a mechanism for translating changes in cell shape into dramatic intracellular remodeling.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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