Mechanical positioning of multiple nuclei in muscle cells
Authored by Alex Mogilner, Angelika Manhart, Stefanie Windner, Mary Baylies
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006208
Sponsors:
United States National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Platforms:
Cytosim
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Many types of large cells have multiple nuclei. In skeletal muscle
fibers, the nuclei are distributed along the cell to maximize their
internuclear distances. This myonuclear positioning is crucial for cell
function. Although microtubules, microtubule associated proteins, and
motors have been implicated, mechanisms responsible for myonuclear
positioning remain unclear. We used a combination of rough interacting
particle and detailed agent-based modeling to examine computationally
the hypothesis that a force balance generated by microtubules positions
the muscle nuclei. Rather than assuming the nature and identity of the
forces, we simulated various types of forces between the pairs of nuclei
and between the nuclei and cell boundary to position the myonuclei
according to the laws of mechanics. We started with a large number of
potential interacting particle models and computationally screened these
models for their ability to fit biological data on nuclear positions in
hundreds of Drosophila larval muscle cells. This reverse engineering
approach resulted in a small number of feasible models, the one with the
best fit suggests that the nuclei repel each other and the cell boundary
with forces that decrease with distance. The model makes nontrivial
predictions about the increased nuclear density near the cell poles, the
zigzag patterns of the nuclear positions in wider cells, and about
correlations between the cell width and elongated nuclear shapes, all of
which we confirm by image analysis of the biological data. We support
the predictions of the interacting particle model with simulations of an
agent-based mechanical model. Taken together, our data suggest that
microtubules growing from nuclear envelopes push on the neighboring
nuclei and the cell boundaries, which is sufficient to establish the
nearly-uniform nuclear spreading observed in muscle fibers.
Tags
differentiation
Dynamics
movement
computational model
Organization
Skeletal-muscle
Drosophila
Somatic musculature
Microtubule
Domains