A first-principles geometric model for dynamics of motor-driven centrosomal asters
Yuan-Nan Young, Vicente Gomez Herrera, Helena Z. Huan, Reza Farhadifar, and Michael J. Shelley

TL;DR
This paper develops a first-principles geometric model for centrosomal aster dynamics, revealing how forces, cell shape, and interactions influence their behavior and stability during cell division.
Contribution
It introduces the S-model based solely on force interactions, incorporating cell shape effects, bifurcation analysis, and a novel understanding of multiple asters' arrangements.
Findings
Cell shape influences aster centering stability.
Increasing motor number causes transition to oscillations.
Asters can relax onto vertices of polyhedra, mimicking Coulomb interactions.
Abstract
The centrosomal aster is a mobile cellular organelle that exerts and transmits forces necessary for nuclear migration and spindle positioning. Recent experimental and theoretical studies of nematode and human cells demonstrate that pulling forces on asters by cortical force generators are dominant during such processes. We present a comprehensive investigation of a first-principles model of aster dynamics, the S-model (S for stoichiometry), based solely on such forces. The model evolves the astral centrosome position, a probability field of cell-surface motor occupancy by centrosomal microtubules (under an assumption of stoichiometric binding), and free boundaries of unattached, growing microtubules. We show how cell shape affects the centering stability of the aster, and its transition to oscillations with increasing motor number. Seeking to understand observations in single-cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsModular Robots and Swarm Intelligence · Control and Dynamics of Mobile Robots · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies
