TY - JOUR
T1 - How does a millimeter-sized cell find its center?
AU - Wühr, Martin
AU - Dumont, Sophie
AU - Groen, Aaron C.
AU - Needleman, Daniel J.
AU - Mitchison, Timothy J.
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Stefan Grill and Yifat Merbl for reading the manuscript, Will Ludington, Horatiu Fantana, Frank Jülicher, Jagesh Shah, Andrew Murray, Marc Kirschner, Cell Division Group Woods Hole and people in the Mitchison Lab for helpful suggestions and discussion, Nikon Imaging Center (HMS) and and Angela DePace for help with imaging. D.J.N. was supported by the Life Sciences Research Foundation, sponsored by Novartis. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant GM39565.
PY - 2009/4/15
Y1 - 2009/4/15
N2 - Microtubules play a central role in centering the nucleus or mitotic spindle in eukaryotic cells. However, despite common use of microtubules for centering, physical mechanisms can vary greatly, and depend on cell size and cell type. In the small fission yeast cells, the nucleus can be centered by pushing forces that are generated when growing microtubules hit the cell boundary. This mechanism may not be possible in larger cells, because the compressive force that microtubules can sustain are limited by buckling, so maximal force decreases with microtubule length. In a well-studied intermediate sized cell, the C. elegans fertilized egg, centrosomes are centered by cortex-attached motors that pull on microtubules. This mechanism is widely assumed to be general for larger cells. However, re-evaluation of classic experiments in a very large cell, the fertilized amphibian egg, argues against such generality. In these large eggs, movement of asters away from a part of the cell boundary that they are touching cannot be mediated by cortical pulling, because the astral microtubules are too short to reach the opposite cell boundary. Additionally, Herlant and Brachet discovered a century ago that multiple asters within a single egg center relative to the cell boundary, but also relative to each other. Here, we summarize current understanding of microtubule organization during the first cell cycle in a fertilized Xenopus egg, discuss how microtubule asters move towards the center of this very large cell, and how multiple asters shape and position themselves relative to each other.
AB - Microtubules play a central role in centering the nucleus or mitotic spindle in eukaryotic cells. However, despite common use of microtubules for centering, physical mechanisms can vary greatly, and depend on cell size and cell type. In the small fission yeast cells, the nucleus can be centered by pushing forces that are generated when growing microtubules hit the cell boundary. This mechanism may not be possible in larger cells, because the compressive force that microtubules can sustain are limited by buckling, so maximal force decreases with microtubule length. In a well-studied intermediate sized cell, the C. elegans fertilized egg, centrosomes are centered by cortex-attached motors that pull on microtubules. This mechanism is widely assumed to be general for larger cells. However, re-evaluation of classic experiments in a very large cell, the fertilized amphibian egg, argues against such generality. In these large eggs, movement of asters away from a part of the cell boundary that they are touching cannot be mediated by cortical pulling, because the astral microtubules are too short to reach the opposite cell boundary. Additionally, Herlant and Brachet discovered a century ago that multiple asters within a single egg center relative to the cell boundary, but also relative to each other. Here, we summarize current understanding of microtubule organization during the first cell cycle in a fertilized Xenopus egg, discuss how microtubule asters move towards the center of this very large cell, and how multiple asters shape and position themselves relative to each other.
KW - Aster
KW - Centering
KW - Microtubules
KW - Pulling
KW - Pushing
KW - Xenopus
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=65949087216&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=65949087216&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4161/cc.8.8.8150
DO - 10.4161/cc.8.8.8150
M3 - Article
C2 - 19282671
AN - SCOPUS:65949087216
SN - 1538-4101
VL - 8
SP - 1115
EP - 1121
JO - Cell Cycle
JF - Cell Cycle
IS - 8
ER -