Coexistence of trapped and flow-transported nuclei enables fast pigeon post communication across multinucleated cell
Johnny Tong, Kaspar Wachinger, Fabian K. Henn, Nico Schramma, Siyu Chen, Karen Alim

TL;DR
This study reveals a novel intracellular communication mechanism in multi-nucleated cells, where mobile and trapped nuclei coordinate via flow and diffusion, enabling rapid signaling akin to pigeon post.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of pigeon-post-like signaling in multinucleated cells, combining flow and trapping of nuclei to enhance communication speed beyond diffusion.
Findings
Nuclei alternate between mobile and trapped states within Physarum.
Flow slows mobile nuclei, facilitating diffusible signal exchange.
Pigeon-post mechanism achieves signaling velocities up to twenty times faster than diffusion.
Abstract
Multi-nucleated cells exist in all domains of life, ranging from animals, plants and fungi to single-celled organisms such as the slime mold Physarum polycephalum. The large cell size, in the case of Physarum reaching centimeters and more, challenges the coordination of nuclei activity as signals need to cross large distances. In search for a mechanism for fast long-ranged communication among nuclei, we quantify nuclei dynamics and cytoplasmic flows in Physarum's tubular network. We observe nuclei in two interchangeable, dynamic states: mobile, flowing within the cytoplasmic shuttle flow, or trapped in the tube's porous cell cortex. As we find nuclei to accumulate at the tube's inner fluid-porous interface we theoretically explore and confirm, with physiological parameters, that slowing down of mobile nuclei during flow is sufficient for diffusible signal exchange between mobile and…
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