Nucleation feedback can drive establishment and maintenance of biased microtubule polarity in neurites
Hannah G. Scanlon, Gibarni Mahata, Anna C. Nelson, Scott A. McKinley, Melissa M. Rolls, and Maria-Veronica Ciocanel

TL;DR
This study presents a stochastic model showing that nucleation feedback can establish and maintain biased microtubule polarity in neurites, explaining how polarized cytoskeleton organization persists despite dynamic instability.
Contribution
It introduces a validated spatially-explicit model demonstrating nucleation feedback as a key mechanism for microtubule polarity bias in neurites.
Findings
Nucleation feedback alone can generate biased microtubule polarity.
Biased polarity is stable despite stochastic fluctuations.
The model applies to neurites of various lengths.
Abstract
The microtubule cytoskeleton is comprised of dynamic, polarized filaments that facilitate transport within the cell. Polarized microtubule arrays are key to facilitating cargo transport in long cells such as neurons. Microtubules also undergo dynamic instability, where the plus and minus ends of the filaments switch between growth and shrinking phases, leading to frequent microtubule turnover. Although microtubules often completely disassemble and new filaments nucleate, microtubule arrays have been observed to both maintain their biased orientation throughout the cell lifetime and to rearrange their polarity as an adaptive response to injury. Motivated by cytoskeleton organization in neurites, we propose a spatially-explicit stochastic model of microtubule arrays and investigate how nucleation of new filaments could generate biased polarity in a simple linear domain. Using a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotoreceptor and optogenetics research · Microtubule and mitosis dynamics · Protein Structure and Dynamics
