Spatial confinement of active microtubule networks induces large-scale rotational cytoplasmic flow

Kazuya Suzuki(Waseda University), Makito Miyazaki(Waseda University), Jun Takagi(Waseda University), Takeshi Itabashi(Waseda University), Shin’ichi Ishiwata(Waseda University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 6, 2017
Cited by 85Open Access
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Abstract

egg extracts as a model system of the cytoplasm and found that microtubule bundle elongation induces directed flow for which the length scale and timescale depend on the existence of geometrical constraints. At the lower activity of dynein, kinesins bundle and slide microtubules, organizing extensile microtubule bundles. In bulk extracts, the extensile bundles connected with each other and formed a random network, and vortex flows with a length scale comparable to the bundle length continually emerged and persisted for 1 min at multiple places. When the extracts were encapsulated in droplets, the extensile bundles pushed the droplet boundary. This pushing force initiated symmetry breaking of the randomly oriented bundle network, leading to bundles aligning into a rotating vortex structure. This vortex induced rotational cytoplasmic flows on the length scale and timescale that were 10- to 100-fold longer than the vortex flows emerging in bulk extracts. Our results suggest that microtubule systems use not only hydrodynamic interactions but also mechanical interactions to induce large-scale temporally stable cytoplasmic flow.


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