The mitotic spindle in the one-cell C. elegans embryo is positioned with high precision and stability
Jacques Pecreaux, Stefanie Redemann, Zahraa Alayan, Benjamin Mercat,, Sylvain Pastezeur, Carlos Garzon-Coral, Anthony A. Hyman, Jonathon Howard

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the mitotic spindle in early C. elegans embryos is positioned with remarkable precision and stability, likely due to the buckling of astral microtubules exerting pushing forces, ensuring accurate cell division.
Contribution
The paper provides quantitative evidence of high-precision spindle positioning and proposes a microtubule buckling mechanism as the basis for this stability.
Findings
Spindle position variation is only 1.5% of cell short axis.
Fluctuations in spindle position are only 0.5% of cell short axis.
Approximately one thousand microtubules are involved in centering.
Abstract
Precise positioning of the mitotic spindle is important for specifying the plane of cell division, which in turn determines how the cytoplasmic contents are partitioned into the daughter cells, and how the daughters are positioned within the tissue. During metaphase in the early C. elegans embryo, the spindle is aligned and centered on the anterior-posterior axis by a microtubule-dependent machinery that exerts restoring forces when the spindle is displaced from the center. To investigate the accuracy and stability of centering, we tracked the position and orientation of the mitotic spindle during the first cell division with high temporal and spatial resolution. We found that the precision is remarkably high: the cell-to-cell variation in the transverse position of the center of the spindle during metaphase, as measured by the standard deviation, was only 1.5% of the length of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
