2022
DOI: 10.1007/s11538-021-00985-2
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Mechanical Torque Promotes Bipolarity of the Mitotic Spindle Through Multi-centrosomal Clustering

Abstract: Intracellular forces shape cellular organization and function. One example is the mitotic spindle, a cellular machine consisting of multiple chromosomes and centrosomes which interact via dynamic microtubule filaments and motor proteins, resulting in complicated spatially dependent forces. For a cell to divide properly, is important for the spindle to be bipolar, with chromosomes at the center and multiple centrosomes clustered into two 'poles' at opposite sides of the chromosomes. Experimental observations sh… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Previous studies of mitotic cell division utilizing different modeling approaches have been valuable in understanding and informing force-derived centrosome clustering mechanisms in cells with centrosome amplification (Chatterjee et al, 2020; Goupil et al, 2020; Miles et al, 2022). In particular, these models have provided insight into chromosome-dependent centrosome clustering mechanisms which implicated kinetochore microtubule-derived torque (Miles et al, 2022) and have highlighted that there must exist a delicate balance between attraction forces for efficient centrosome clustering to occur, including centrosome-cortex forces (Chatterjee et al, 2020). Our results further expand on this latter observation by identifying that the centrosome-cortex force must correspond to a region on the cell cortex, either fixed or dynamically changing, for efficient clustering to occur via dynein motor activation (Figure 4).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Previous studies of mitotic cell division utilizing different modeling approaches have been valuable in understanding and informing force-derived centrosome clustering mechanisms in cells with centrosome amplification (Chatterjee et al, 2020; Goupil et al, 2020; Miles et al, 2022). In particular, these models have provided insight into chromosome-dependent centrosome clustering mechanisms which implicated kinetochore microtubule-derived torque (Miles et al, 2022) and have highlighted that there must exist a delicate balance between attraction forces for efficient centrosome clustering to occur, including centrosome-cortex forces (Chatterjee et al, 2020). Our results further expand on this latter observation by identifying that the centrosome-cortex force must correspond to a region on the cell cortex, either fixed or dynamically changing, for efficient clustering to occur via dynein motor activation (Figure 4).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, chromosomes form stable interactions, via kinetochores, with bundles of microtubules that are in turn anchored at the centrosomes (DeLuca et al, 2006). The bioriented configuration, and associated forces, of paired kinetochores enforce a bipolar geometry where centrosomes are positioned along the spindle axis (Leber et al, 2010; Tanaka, 2010; Chatterjee et al, 2020; Miles et al, 2022). Similarly, cell shape and actin-dependent cortical contractility impact centrosome clustering by restricting the space within which centrosomes can move (Kwon et al, 2008; Rhys et al, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, 2022 ). In particular, these models have provided insight into chromosome-dependent centrosome clustering mechanisms that implicated kinetochore microtubule–derived torque ( Miles et al. , 2022 ) and have highlighted that there must exist a delicate balance between attraction forces for efficient centrosome clustering to occur, including centrosome-cortex forces ( Chatterjee et al.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This simulation is originally implemented to assess the average behavior of a collective dynamics system [23]. Previous research on the promotion of mitotic spindle bipolarity by mechanical torque considered the mean-field approximation to better understand the cellular biology mechanisms in general [24]. The approximation was thought to be a possible approach as an average of multiple microtubules at work.…”
Section: Comentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is understandable since the involved forces between centrosomes, chromosomes, and microtubules in mitotic spindle covered a large molecular simulation system. However, this mean-field approximation served only as an initial concept to the interacting-particle model that were used along with other models to gain more understanding of the mitotic spindle bipolarity [24].…”
Section: Comentioning
confidence: 99%