The role of vimentin-nuclear interactions in persistent cell motility through confined spaces
Sarthak Gupta, Alison E. Patteson, J. M. Schwarz

TL;DR
This study models how vimentin influences cell motility and nuclear deformation in confined spaces, revealing that vimentin-null cells move faster, have more deformed nuclei, and exhibit increased persistence due to altered internal polarization.
Contribution
The paper introduces a minimal mechanistic model incorporating all three cytoskeletal filaments to explain vimentin's role in confined cell motility and nuclear deformation.
Findings
Vimentin-null cells are faster in confined environments.
Vimentin-null cells have more deformed nuclei.
Vimentin influences nucleus positioning and cell persistence.
Abstract
The ability of cells to move through small spaces depends on the mechanical properties of the cellular cytoskeleton and on nuclear deformability. In mammalian cells, the cytoskeleton is comprised of three interacting, semi-flexible polymer networks: actin, microtubules, and intermediate filaments (IF). Recent experiments of mouse embryonic fibroblasts with and without vimentin have shown that the IF vimentin plays a role in confined cell motility. We, therefore, develop a minimal model of cells moving through confined geometries that effectively includes all three types of cytoskeletal filaments with a cell consisting of an actomyosin cortex and a deformable cell nucleus and mechanical connections between the two cortices the outer actomyosin one and the inner nuclear one. By decreasing the amount of vimentin, we find that the cell speed is typically faster for vimentin-null cells as…
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