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Contribution of cytoplasm viscoelastic properties to mitotic spindle positioning.


ABSTRACT: Cells are filled with macromolecules and polymer networks that set scale-dependent viscous and elastic properties to the cytoplasm. Although the role of these parameters in molecular diffusion, reaction kinetics, and cellular biochemistry is being increasingly recognized, their contributions to the motion and positioning of larger organelles, such as mitotic spindles for cell division, remain unknown. Here, using magnetic tweezers to displace and rotate mitotic spindles in living embryos, we uncovered that the cytoplasm can impart viscoelastic reactive forces that move spindles, or passive objects with similar size, back to their original positions. These forces are independent of cytoskeletal force generators yet reach hundreds of piconewtons and scale with cytoplasm crowding. Spindle motion shears and fluidizes the cytoplasm, dissipating elastic energy and limiting spindle recoils with functional implications for asymmetric and oriented divisions. These findings suggest that bulk cytoplasm material properties may constitute important control elements for the regulation of division positioning and cellular organization.

SUBMITTER: Xie J 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8872784 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Contribution of cytoplasm viscoelastic properties to mitotic spindle positioning.

Xie Jing J   Najafi Javad J   Le Borgne Rémi R   Verbavatz Jean-Marc JM   Durieu Catherine C   Sallé Jeremy J   Minc Nicolas N  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20220201 8


Cells are filled with macromolecules and polymer networks that set scale-dependent viscous and elastic properties to the cytoplasm. Although the role of these parameters in molecular diffusion, reaction kinetics, and cellular biochemistry is being increasingly recognized, their contributions to the motion and positioning of larger organelles, such as mitotic spindles for cell division, remain unknown. Here, using magnetic tweezers to displace and rotate mitotic spindles in living embryos, we unc  ...[more]

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