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- Title
Acentrosomal spindles assemble from branching microtubule nucleation near chromosomes in Xenopus laevis egg extract.
- Authors
Gouveia, Bernardo; Setru, Sagar U.; King, Matthew R.; Hamlin, Aaron; Stone, Howard A.; Shaevitz, Joshua W.; Petry, Sabine
- Abstract
Microtubules are generated at centrosomes, chromosomes, and within spindles during cell division. Whereas microtubule nucleation at the centrosome is well characterized, much remains unknown about where, when, and how microtubules are nucleated at chromosomes. To address these questions, we reconstitute microtubule nucleation from purified chromosomes in meiotic Xenopus egg extract and find that chromosomes alone can form spindles. We visualize microtubule nucleation near chromosomes using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to find that this occurs through branching microtubule nucleation. By inhibiting molecular motors, we find that the organization of the resultant polar branched networks is consistent with a theoretical model where the effectors for branching nucleation are released by chromosomes, forming a concentration gradient that spatially biases branching microtbule nucleation. In the presence of motors, these branched networks are ultimately organized into functional spindles, where the number of emergent spindle poles scales with the number of chromosomes and total chromatin area. Microtubules need to be generated during cell division to build mitotic or meiotic spindles. Here, reconstitution experiments and theoretical modeling show that chromosomes alone can trigger branching microtubule nucleation.
- Subjects
MICROTUBULES; XENOPUS eggs; XENOPUS laevis; SPINDLE apparatus; CHROMOSOMES; NUCLEATION
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2023, Vol 14, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-39041-z